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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-08-29 - Orange Coast Pilot• ,. DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 29, 1973 VOi,., ... NO, Ml, 1 IEc:TIOflS, N PA.U . . . .. • ·er and • • • • LA .Landing Mislaap 5 Women Hurt As LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Fift women were injured, one critically with a broken neck. when a Trans World Airlines Boeing 7ITI was jolted as It approached Los Angeles Internatiooal Airport. TWA sad the mishap Tueod11Y night wu caused by mechanical failure or air ttp"bulence. An investigation is under ·~· . A pa,...ger, Ann Clemente of San Diego, said "For a minute, it felt like we were at the Promised Land. "There were people behind me praying. We were flying through the air. We were bounced around quite a bit" 1be women, Including two stewardesses, were standing up when the plane shoot, TWA sald. Marge Payette of Huntinrtoo Beach, was in critical condition wifh a broken nedc at Centioela Valley Community Hospital. Two others w.re hospitalised with lesser lnjlll'ies. They were Identified as Ellen Hargltay, 31, of Los Angeles, with a sprained hand and a possible ba_ck in- jury, and Te-.sun Hse, 18, of Taiwan, with a broken jaw and a possible fractured skull. Spiro 4,gnew Daughter Threatened . The stewanlesaes were treated at the hospital and released. They were lden- WAS!IJNGTON (UPI) -Vice Pres~ lilied .. En ... Chapiro, 21, of Honolulu, dent Spiro T. Apew's dalJiht<r SUsat1 and Belfy Gray, JO, ol Steomboot SprlngJ, ho ,._ hos 'ta! bl Colo. Hospital spokesman said' bOth cut s rt a voyage on w11: pl s p suffered lower back injuries. USS Hope becauae or threat. on her life United Preis Intemational quoted ooe made iD Brull, an ~ sPotesmao passenger sayq there was a lot of sald todAf. "praying oot ioud." Marsh· 'rhomson, the vice pmldenl's "People were touching the ceiling and press aecretary1 said Uie family made "a coming down," said John AdalllJ of judgjnenl ... not to take any further Norton, Mass. "It was really chaos." risks" and arranged to have the 26-year-0 A couple of people fell very badly. old Miss Apew .-.tum ID Wuhlngtoo. The people who were not In their ,..ts, Miss Agnew, who sslled aboard the they were the ooes who got burl." Hope in February with the intention of Adams said there was no warning to returning in December, worked with fasten seat belts. · andi~visual education equipment. He added there was "no panic." '1There had been threats on her life The spokesman said a.military doctor down there (Brazil) and although the traveling on flight 742 from Hong Kong Braziliam thought they could take care via Okinawa, Taiwan, Guam and or the situation and the vice president Honolulu aided the Injured berore the has expressed conndenc'e In the ability of Je.tliner land~. the Brazilian government to provide There were 132 passengers ,and nine D(!Ces&ary security, .., a father he crew members aboard lhe flight, winted to take the prudent l,'?euure of Scheduled to terminate in San Francl!co. bringing her closer to home, Th<>nplon Passengers were sent to San Franci!co said. · aboard other planes. The Washln«lon Star-News ~ to-TWA spokesmao Mike Leon sald the day that Dr. William .Walsh, who loo= .. ca1111e of the accident "could have been Project Hope under which the ship • (see JOLT Page Z) on hl!Planitarlan missions, sald both be • and·/ofiss Agnew received se\lenl threat. , ------------ -including one last week 'that could not be Ignored. ··This WU I threat whJch· we ~It WU ,,_ iertoos and American 11¥.Dlgence ; lll'Oed with Bra!llian 'ln)'ill8"11ct;" \fa!Jh told the Star-Newa. "The Brazilians felt she was worth a ,,.eat .deal In ransom In exchance 'for palltlcal p r I s o n e r s and their r~bWty wa.s greater than· oun/' ~Walsh. . COUCH, CHA.IR DRA.W RESPONSE Success stories are not as rare as you might think. Look at lhls one: * 6' COUCH & matching ehalr. Gold & white. Almost new. $!0. <ri-No.) Mias J.snew told the Star-News that bir return had nothing 'to do iNlth the •iii· ' v.111Uiat1oh of her rather In eonneetlon • This Dally, Pilot advertiser had 15 calls Wllh atlqed kJckbacks from Maryland the first night! The Item WU sold, or conlracto!'I. . course, and another success story was 0. ·that ieore, t he WIS quoted u wlllten. OUr Ad-visor can help )Ql1 write 111In1: "· .. I don 't feel 11\Y cauae for your own sucoess atory. Dial her dlrect- eoncem IM!cauae t 1tnow my lather Is an 64U6'18. honest person ." ----·-------- ) eac· ! -. . Fi.,e Injured as Plane • Jolted on LA Landing , . . . • •• • • . . ·- -. • I •· ~ • . - Probes Bay Progress Moor.us L«Jst Children UP'IT ....... MOTHER SITS IN RUINS OF HER ORIZABA HOME AFTER THREE OF HER CHILDREN PERISHED Ma"l1ive Killer Earthquake Rumblff A'°"9.Ancient F•ult in Mount•inous Central Mexico · R11:pe' Victim's Husband Sets Reward in · Be~ch The bu.band ol !be latest victim of what Huntihgton Beach police call the "Downtown Rapist" today put up a $2,000 reward fqr.infonnation leading to the ~" rest and conviction ol the criminal. Det...Fred Loya said police believe the latest alla::I:, which took place Tuesday as lhe woman stePt in her home, is one more In a cl>lin' of nearly 10 attacks daling ba~ about two years. The latest vlctlm was beaten by her al· tacker when she tried to resist him, of· flcers sald. The houaewiCe was home alone with her two children at the Ume of the 3 a.m. aitack, police said. ·AU of the rape11 that police believe have been committed by the Downtown Rapist follow a pattern. All the victims · have !Je<n sleeping in their home• In the downtown area and are either home alone or with just their children, who are also asleep. • • • Detectives aald they will be pressing their search I. tocate the man, 'described by the latest victim as being a Cauculau in his mid-Ills with dark ,and curly Iobg halr, about Dve feet eight lnches'tall aod weighing about 150 pounds. "We will be concentrating on these cases," Loya said today. "We want to get him before he makes victims out of any more women." Anyone with infonnaUon on the case should contaot Lota at 136-S352. Bar Tells Violations sAN DIEGO (AP) -TJie right. or !l<lme mlsdemeanordefendanll have been violated amd othen have been'personally abused by San Diego Mwticlpal Court Judges because of the absence of court reporters, the County Bar Association said Tuesdoy. Quake in Mexico I(ills 500; More . Victims F~red MEXICO CITY (UPI) -The death toll In Tuesday's ea rthquRke motmted steadi· ly today. and by dawn the Mexican presi~cy was reporting .. a~t 500 dead." One Mexico City -per put the toll at 924. The Mexico City dally El Heraldo ssid 600 dled. Other counts ran between 400 and 600. At least 2,0()fl persons were reported in· jured and tens of thousands left homeless. As d•wn broke, survivors duq through the ruins ol their homes. The dead were laid out ln priv ate tioines, locai hospitals and . blankets ~'Kie" the streets. Some were ltln '!'Ider the debr is. The death toll rose 1as reports c;i me in frorn outfylng vill3ges and crt:!ws "':-n tlnuc~ to clear the wreckage. Raih ripped the area Tuesday ni;ht !·1· cleared by dawn. Resident. took little ~ ol It. 1n the quake-stricken nre..i surround! (See QUAKE, Page !l Acquisition Of Newport BayPu~hed By JORN ZALLER ' Of "'9 ~Wr Pla.t St ... The Orange County Grand Jury Is COO· ducting an Investigation ID see If Orange County supervl,.,... are moving rast enough toward bringing Upper Newport Bay into ~lie ownership, It was learned ·today. Marcia Bents, grand jury foreman, said the purpose ol the Inquiry is "to see that the board d supervisors really ac· complishes something" In It. efforts to acquire the Upper Bay. · Mrs. Bent. stressed that the in- vestigation is part of the grand jury's "mgotng e!forl to monitor the operatloM of all phases or county government. 11We are not sure at this point whether we will issue a report or not," .Mrs. Bents said. "If the effort to acquire the boy t. mov- ing too slowly we -will have something to say," she declared . "If good progress Is being made, we may keep quiet," she said, "but we do want to make sure that the county keeps up the effort to bring the bay Into public ownership.'' . The Irvine Company last April offered its Upper Bay holding! to whatever public agencies are interested in them, saying terms .of a land sale or trade could be worked oot later. The company said it was willing to ac· cept any reasooable terms of purchase and stressed that it hoped the public could asswne possession ol the Upper (l!ee PROBE, Page Z) Orange Coast Weatller The sun will peek through those low clouds Thursday morning leav- ing the rest of tbe day fairly sunny. Highs will range from 70 a I the beaches to 75 lnlaod. Overnight lows 63-65. INSIDE TOUi\ l' lt wai a gay time in New York -even though th ey lost mUer- ably. The h.omose~ commu· ·1ti ty played the police depart- ment in a friendly baseball game !o bette r their image. Story ?oge 7. Al Vov~ Sink• ) AM leMen • l .M .• ..,. 11 rul .. • ' 1wn111 2l Mwlll 1'<tl C~:ltt>~I• J, 11 M:.tlt;ll ,..., t2 ~ltM" COf'ft W 11 N•tlOllll N"'" 4 C'"''~lnl U.... Ofll'M CtulltY 14 Clf'lllCt " l"'1\ 17•tt Ctl ,...... • C · Si.l11enM \6 C... • llc1tt u l 'ct• Mllltll• ~ f 41jl• I .. ,,. ' T......... 11 C .. tr '"1"'11 1••2' 1'11Mf9" )Ml ·lr~~ 11·1J WM!tlw 4 !"I'll IM 11 '1'. I W_ .......... ~. r .c. • n W"1f tMwt 4 -- _% _ DAil Y PILOT s WtdM~ay, August 29, 1CJ7J . Heat Threatens Eastern Electricity f'rom r.,.1 QUAKE .•• lh• 18,700.foot Orizaba volcano, debril stood stlll acaltered on the ot'"ll ol several 1•'11• iowno end a multi!""' et vilh1ges. By The Assoi;ialed Press \Vilh lOO:degree tentperatucs threaten- ing, the New \'ork State POYler J;looJ put a Nlfltewlde nve percent voltage reduction into effect today . Other utilities on the i-:asl Coast and In the Midwest bra ced for nnother bout with severe eJe ctric power demands 11 the wave of hot, mue:gy nir hung on. The cutback In New York came three hqurs earlier than the 5 percent cut TUesday which the pool said enabled it to meet a record demand of 20 132 000 ~H9watts a~ n1idaften1oon. Tempe~atUres 1n the m1d-90s cau1ed massive coo- swnption of electricity by air con· Ma rine T rial Jury Excused For One Day An Orange County Superior Court jury that must eventually determine the guilt ~"' ingooeoc, of acouaed El Toro Marine Sgt. Jared Allan Wallace got a day off from the murder trial today to allow Judge Raymond Vincent and the two lawyers involved to prepare jury in- structions. Judge Vincent .excused the panel late Tuesday after depuly public defender Ron Butler campleted hi1 case in answer to char1e1 of murder, rape and kidnap. Butler and prosecutor Robert Chat- terton said they will deliver final arrumentl IAj lhe jury Thursday alter brief rebuttal testimony from further witnesses. Wallace. 26, denied from the witness stand that he raped and strangled cocktail waitress Nanette Post, 27, of Fowllain Valley last Feb. 9. The veteran or two Vietnam tours told the jury he was "nowhere near" the Huntington Beach area m· the hours before Mra. Post's nude body w11 discovered. \llallace told the jury that he suffered a memory lapse five days earHer "'hen he allegedly kidnaped South Laguna X·r1y technician carole Ann Rowan. Miss Rowan, 24, told the jury she was responding to an emergency call from a San Clemente hospital \Vhen Wallace ordered her to halt her car near the beach cities offramp of lhe San Diego Freeway. She said Wallace. \\'ho \YOrked as a part time security guard for the Mission Viejo Company and Fountain Valley Plaza, ordered her at gunpoint to put handcuffs on her wris ts. , Miss Rowan said she struggled with Wallace to Ille point that the Marine sergeant pulled over to the aid e of the freeway and she was able to leap from his car. Wallace testlned. lhat his memory went blank trom the time he was questioning a woman trespasser in the liiJsslon Viejo area to a fe w hours later when he realiz- ed that h1i ss Rowan was riding ~·Ith him in his car. F rona Page J JOLT ... one of two things -clear air turbulence or a mechanical malfun ction in parts of the tail. ~·The captain see med to indicate there \Vas a malfunction of the trim tab or elevator control. As yet , we have not con- firmed that. There was no visible damage to the plane. They've got the plane i.n a hangar and our people are still going over it.'~ The trim tab and elevator control keep the aircraft level when it climbs or descends. The pilot, J. W. Harpster of San Fran- cisco, reported !he jetliner experlenced "a violent shaking for a few seconds" while it \vas descending from Its cruising altitude or 33.000 feet and still s9me 25 n1lnutes ou t at sen. OU.Nel COAIT IT DAILY PILOT , Tiit O't"te Co-st OA llY PILOT, wlrr. WlllCll i. '""'!Md rr.1 Nt.,...P,eu, i1 11111:t!1sP!ecl by lltt Or1rig1 Cota! PubUthinO Com .... r ...... ,,,. tcilt'°1>• ''' Mlltiwio. M0<1c11r ltlrouo~ Frldty, lo• Co.1!1 M ... , NtWPOrl &tKh. Hunll1111t1111 8•at;lll,._,llln Y•lley, L11111t11 8Hch, 11'\'lnt/~H~ .... Lift Clt,,,.nlt/ Sin J11an C1pl11r-. A 1!n1!1 1"99\oMI edition i1 PIJ~lltl\1111 ktlll''lll't'I end Sun<Uy .. I ... prll'Ctpal P<lllli•llll'ICI pllnl II 11 J:JO Wttl llf 11, .. t, CPllt MtMll. C.UIO,ni., f)IH. ll:obtrl M, WeM l'••lllffl/ •11111 1'1.oblllht• J•ck II:. C11rl1y Viet ~•t1M!enl Incl 01~tr1l Mfn .. fl Tho"''' Ktt•ll Editor Tho1U1' A. M11rpliin1 M•"*tlnt 1111+., Cllt-411 Ii. loo1 ltlchtr.I t . Ntlt Aul"'"' M1"'flnt £t!llH'• CNtt Mt ll l lJI 'Ntll lfY llrHI HtwWI IMCl'I! lJ.tt .Jolt"'"'' l..,lt~trt LtfllM IHC~1 2D "••t1I A....,llt HUoltlrlflOn 'l11e:~; 11'fj ltKll .. 11ie.1r.i kn (:ltmenlt1 •t !Qrtll f l (lflll!\o -HI , ....... f7141 '41-4111 C'-"W Aimrtf .... 141·1111 ,,.... c ................ " ............ 4flMH .,_..,. °""" CMllfY ~ -t•lt (ffyrlfll,, 1"1. Of•• C..I Ntl~ .... C ..... ~y. Nt .....,. ...... , IHullrtrttM. .,,.,. .. 1 ~ .. ..,....,.""""'tt '*""' -· .. ~ .... .,.. .. 1 .. Mll•lofl .. C9Y'ltft! """"' ~ cleM .. "" Ntl ti (11111• Mftl, C.1"""4e. ~lltrl w ''""" P.11 "-'lrlll'ri ... """ "''' "*""'"'! l"!llllM• ... ,~-a.a -it11y. I ' dil ioners an<l so1ne poYler failures \Yert repol'ted. A spokesn1an fore tast lhat today's de- 1nand also y,·ould palis 20 million k!IO\\'ttlts. Auto co1npanies closed dawn several ~lidwcstern plants because of the heat wave, "'hile son'e 750 S\veltertng workers at tw o other plants simply walk· ed off their jobs. New York City suffered through a ycar·high temperature of 98 Tuesday as Consolidated ~dison reported a record pawer demand of 8.161 megawatts . The tempera ture-humidity Index hit 85, which a 1pokesman for the National \Veatber service said meant ,;utter misery." The power pool got 906 mega~'Atts of exira electricity fron1 the Ontario Hydroelectric Power Commission in Canada, which also aupplied more than 1,000 megawatts to !'lflchfgan utiliti es. In Washington, the tc.n)perature reach- ed 97 and the capital'li 1netropolitan area "''as under an air pollution alert for the 17th day this summer. Hot, ataanant air holding Pollution over the area waa not expected to dlsslpate before Friday. A spokesman for the Virginia Electric & Power Co. in Richmond said the utility had a record power dema nd of 7,100 megawatts Tuesday. In the Detroit area, where the tem~ perature reached 98 W!lon officials prod- ded Chrysler Corp. into closing Its engine and assembly plants ln \Varrtn, Atich. and \Vindsor, Ont., sending 4,700 workers home. American Motors decided to clOM: Us Kenosha assen1bly and Milwaukee body plants In Wisconsin as well as a jeep faclllly In Toledo, Ohio. A company 1pokesman aaid 17,500 Yi'Orkers were tent home 11ln a decision made on the basis of humanity -it was just too hot to work." At Chrysler truck plants in Windsor and Warren, workers took their own emergency measures and walked out, forclna lhe plan11 to cloae. At Ford Motor Co.'1 Dearborn, Mich. asiJen1bly plant, many employe11 failed to return from break.a. Jorcing th e plant to close after two houri . So111e 2,300 workers went ~me early. Electric power faUure1 Tuuday nlaht affected aboul 11 llOO C111tomera In the Cleveland area. Tlie outa1111 la1led up IO 40 mlnut~. In tho Pittsburgh area , Duquesne Light CO. l'OPlrlld ,.veral nellhborhoodl were 1emponrUy wlthoul power ~auae or overloaded equlP111ent. Fort Wayne (Ind.I City Ulllltlll out off eleclrlolty to city parka .net ~re•tlonol facilltlt• to C()fllerve power. Tem- peralutel thare have hovered In the mid 90s for fiva d1y1. Bornb Sus pect{! Faces Charges WASIIlNGTON !APl -The Postal Service announced the in- dictment in Boaton today of Joseph L. Belculfine, 37, on a charge of mailing the bomb that exploded in the south JX>Stll aMex In Boston July 25. Three postal employea were in~ jured in the exDloalon. Chief Postal fn1pector William J. Cotter said the federal grand jury indictment charges Belculfine with violating federal law which carries a maximum penalty of up to 20 years imprisonment. From r.,e 1 PROBE .•. Bay aa aoon u possible. A Joint feder11l, State, C'OUllty and city agency -the Upper Bay Field Com- mittee -has been meeting regularly in an effort to v.·ork out an agreement wit h the company. There has been little t~ible progress during those five months, however. The offer had been made under the threat of a prescriptive rights la\vsuit by the COWlly. Mrs. Bents acknowled&ed that there have been complaints that certain supervisora have employed dtlaying tac- tics and said the "Grand Jury's en- vironn1ental committee is following them up. She said informal.ion has been re· quested from a number of sources in an effort to evaluate the efforts of the board of Sllpervisors. Ainbulances ran frorn the Orizaba. Valley, Cludad Serdan and olher heavily· hit are11 to 1totpllal1 In MUby lllle oapllell. 'l'rJf!IO In the 1!'11 Wll paokfd ' with ~unleor caN ctrtYlnJ the !Itel' Cro11 baMtr. · : At the town ball In Orizaba olllclaJI: were coordlnati111 reports from ouUyiJ\I vlll•I"· n-who loot their homa; 11ood In line Olltllde the b11Udln1 wlitlnl to reporl lhe illfl••· . Waverly PerlOJ! of the NaUonal EUlb- quake lntonnallon (:enlt!P In J!'!Ulder, · Colo.1 aald the qua-. aDONrld lo bo tltl; wort In MHlt»'• .... hlatol)' In terms of loss of Ute. The early mornlni quake, centered in f11iult lines deep wxler Mexico 's motm- tainous central spine, registered 7 on the Richter Scale -more powerful than the Decentber quake in Managua, Nicaragua that killed 5.000 persons. The Managu!l quake had a Richter intensity of 6.2. llard~st .hit In Tueaday's quake wu the town of Orlzabtl, c1uaht in the epicenter ol the ilant temb lor. A three·atory aparlmonl bulldln& In th• commwilly of llO,llOO per1<ms lllO mUaa east·southeut of Mexrco City collapeed, killing more than 100 tenanll uloep In· aide. Mexican Prealdent Luis Echeverria ,vas en route today to the devastated zone around Orizaba. Thousand were left \Vithout homes. Red Cross officials said about 800 persons were injured. They estinlated 100 persons died in Quecholac In Puebla State; fl bl Cludad Cerdan, 178 In Orlaaba. two Ill Puebla and two In Cordo!)j b1 Veracruz State. Other1 died In 1cattered areu. omctala said Puebla, Mexico's fourth largest city wllh a populallon of lll0,000 located !Kl miles southea1t of Mexico Ci· ty, also 1uftered extensive damage. UPI reported Timothy S.!TY reporled from Orizab! that the Swiss-style etty was half destroyed as scoret of buildings toppled, burying occupants in rubble. Hundreds were left homeless ... ~tayor Hu mberto Guitierrez said the city's 350- bed hospital was badly damaged. Schools were demolished. Orizaba was le ft Y.'ithout electricity or running water. Rock.slides c l o 1 1 d highways into the city. All con'i· munlcations with the outside world, the other aide of the Sierra Madre moun- tairu11, were cut. Dazed survivors wandered the littered streets looking for relatives or possessions. "It vl'as horrible," said secretarr ~1arina Garcia. 18. "It was the wont thing I have ever seen. It aouoded like the whole world was 11haklng." While most humans had lo suffer in the near IOO·de· gree heat in Du Quoin, ru., some of the cows being exhibited at a fair kept nice and cool. Danny Smith U'ITel_... .. hoses down his entry to clean the cow and keep her from getting overheated. Fifth District Supervisor Ro n a I d Casper1 or Newport Beach, chairman of the county board, is one of those the -Grand Jury asked to comment on lhe progress of negotiations. The quake was also felt ln Mexico City, ~·here fr ightened tourllts ran into the atreel8 in their nlght clothes. Dozen.I of amaner towns were rocked . 8·yearii.old Victim Caspers said he is preparing a ·~Titten commentary containing bis views, but would not comment directly on the re- quest. Cabin Cruiser Blown to Bits Off Seal Beach Mesan, 60, Faces 4th However, he did express "COOC€rn•• over what he called "footdraging., by the board us a whole. "Alt the public agencies on the Field COmmlttee are oager IO 1et Koing," Caspera oald. "It i.. only the County of Orange that doesn't seem to be ln a bu~ ry." 2 Plead Guilty In Bi g Sei zure Of LSD, Pot A 29'-foot cabin cruiser exploded in flames Tuesday three miles offshore from Seal Beach, but the Huntington Beach owner of the boat was able to dive overboard unharmed. Ch .ild Molest Charge Seal Baach lifeguards rescued Jnmea Smith, .CS, who lives in the Huntington By the Sea Trailer Park on Pacific coast Highway. Smith, a boatyard operator In Long Beach, was the only penon on board his steel·hulled cruiser. He told lifeguard& he \Vas taking It on a shakedown cruise alter refurbishing It and rebuilding the engines. He etopped to check trouble with the steering mechanism, when he heard a muffled explosion, lifeguards report. Smith peered into the engine rooms, flames shot up from the bilge, and he grabbed a life preserver and jumped. Smith was not hurt, but his boat was destroyed, except for the hull, lifeguards said. The loss waa estimated at $9,000, investigators said. The Orange County Harbor Patrol and the Coast Guard doused the flames, then towed the burned boat back lo Long Beach Marina. Lifeguards think a gas leak might have caused the explosion. Smith had stopped his engine then tried to re-start it. Antis1n og Bill OK'cl SACRAh1ENTO < AP J -Fearing (;ov. Ronald Reagan y,·ould veto a com- prehensive auto safety·antismog-noise control bill, the Assembly Transportation approved a stripped do~·n antismog bill Tuesday. Voting 12--0. the commtttce sent the bill to the Assembly Ways and ~ieans Committee, last stop before it reaches the AU(lmbl)1 Ooor. Police have added a fourth child molesting charge to the growing booking record or Joseph Reitano, a 60-year-old Costa Mesan currently being held in lieu of 150,000 bail. Costa Mesa police allege that Reitano, who liists hls occupation as watch repairman, participated in sexual rela· 1 Uon& with an JI.year-old boy. The boy is the brother of a IO-year-old girl Rel1'lno allegedly molealed In a Coeta Mesa motel, police said. Detective George Wilson said this brings IO 17 the Individual c011nl• or child molestalion wilh which Reitano will be formally charged In Harbor Judicial District Court. Reitano \\ill also be accused of Welfare Leader Guilty of Fraud EL CENTRO (AP) -The presidenl of the Welfare Right! Organitatlon here has been convicted of welfare fraud. lllary McGraw, 26, was convicted Mon- day of a misdemeanor charge in ln1perial Justice Court. She was sen- tenced to 30 days In jail, but it was suspended on the condition she pay $315 rine and agree to two .years probation, court officials said. ~1iss h1cGraw was accused of being e1nployed during December and January, but had signed a form saying she was 1111en1ployed at the time. Pucker Power A Big Kiss for Mae We st LOS ANGELES (U PI ) -When S''Oll klsaed Liz Tueaday night before a cheering crowd of 200, he wasn't trying to wln her heart -he wa1 trytn.i to tmpreq Mae West. Seott Sandler and Liz Shapiro, bolh UCLA student• puckered up for 35 seconds to "'1n a aterllng silver loving cup with Mae Wert~s slanature enaraved Oil it. The kiss, described by an onlooker as "passionate because it was go dls- organltcd," won the fint annual UCLA Romeo and Juliet Kl1sln1 Contest. Mae West, the sole judge of lhe , ... tesl, seleclcd lhe couple by crowd reaction. .~he four. couple! Involved were Judged on five polnta -beauty of embrac:e, pos1Uon of hps, bre ath and noise control, tnvenllveneis and 1ex appeaJ. f Sox-Wlc~dry-Cotton Tube-Tennis Shoes-Basketball-Tennis Football-AD Purpose Gym Pants-Reversible T·Shlrts Wannup suits Sweat Suits Tennis ~ets I HandbaD Glaves Racquetball Racquets Speedo SWlm Suits Open g· to 6 Closed Sundays Basketbans Yoney Bans & Nets feotballs Playpuund Balls Duckf eet Fins Water Wonder Boards Skate Boards Back Packs Sleepinr Ba1s Book B11s RalalJh Bikes R3piilrir.~-Tlrcs-Tubes - CLotn SUNDAY \ ,. I . on pc; Ca ao It'! Ca las "" for biB bu rp1 ca 13! on ev. re· at Th m• re· IS • SU no ur or. ba I do ··a f" pr ol• u fr• of ... WO _,,( gE hi .. , le 10 A D us m ar ct ... Pl ar th UI in b• dl ta In ti g• In • v. •I " " p ti b • • Ir p c ti ,, • p a v e ' ' l r \ < t s DAILY Pl\OT S At Your Service ~73: Year Suinnier Stayed Honie A Sunday, Wednesday and Friday Feature Of the Dally Pilot Got a probtem? Thetl write Pat Dun·n. Pat will cut red ta.pe, get the • am!11ers ottd action you need to -1 totve . ineq·ut-ies i1~ gov- ernment and business. Mail your ques· !ions to Pat 0Uf11'l I Al Your Service, Orangs (,'oost Ooi111 Pilot, P.O. Bo:t 1560, Cosoo Meta, <:a... 92626. lncludt 11ou1 te<eplione numbef'. l'lnylnfJ It A9nl11 ·DEAR PAT: I would like to comment on the letter about old records that ap· peared in the Aug. 8 column. Records by Caruso, Harry Laurdcr, Fritz Kreisler and Fred Waring are by no means rare. It 's rallacy that the possessor of any Caruso records can sell them at a fan- tastic profit. Caruso made hundreds of records (rom 1003 until his death in 1921 f~r the Victor Compa ny, and they were big sellers not only during his lifetime, but up to the present time. Many of his 78 rpm re<..'Ord s were retained in the ~atalog until Victor stopped producing 78s. and many or them are now available on LPs. They "'ere such big sellers that even the original issues or many or his records turn up £or a dime or a quarter at Good"•ill and Salvation Anny stores. The same is true of the other artists mentioned and since these artists' records have been released on LP. there j~ no reason for anyone to pay a lar~e su1n for the original recordin gs. There is no use in contacting reoord manufac- urers since the companies have the original master recordings and would bavc no interest in copies. Q.R., llunlington Beach Record dealers ln the Los Angeles area do buy old records. mainly to maJnt.ain a ,·aritd seleetloa for specific requests from euston1ers. Your lttltr is ap- preciated since its lnformutlun may save old record owners a lot of dl'iappolntment U the)' expected to gain a small fortune from the sale of their collections. lo view of lhe relati\·ely small value of old records. perhaps some of our readers would be willing to share a fe\.\' of their -''oklies•..-o \\'Ith a semi-invalid retlred gentleman wbo bas quite a collection of his own. bul would like to bear some "new" old recordin~s. Any letttrs of- fering record donaUons will be for\.\·ardcd to this reader. G.S,, Sun Clemente. All About l'C:Bs DEAR PAT; I read that the Food antl Drug Administration has restricted the use of polychlorinated biphemyls (PCBs I in the production or foods, food packaging and animal feeds. I know the se are chemical additives, but I'd like to find out v.·hen PCB's wer,e) developed. r the purpose of their use In food processing and v.·hy the FDA has decided to ban them. R.N .. Fountain Vatley By JOllN ZAU.ER Of-ttt. O•JIY 'llot·St ... This may go down RS the year summer never arrived on the Orange Coast. Llfeguard records in Newport Beach show that In the three sununer months of June , July and August there have been just J7 of 99 days that could be called mostly titmny. Officials In other citl~ have similar specifics. And the weatherman says that although conditions are im p r o v in g, coastal areas can expect the sanie basic pattern or cloudy and foggy days to con- linue al least till early September. "There may be a little· more sun in the next two weeks than there has been in the past two months," said Oscar ~~rtm~t ' If!• •, ~ . "\o, --1. ., ~ ~ t ,r ·-· ' NiebOls, district forecaster for the Na· tlooal \Veather Service In Los Angeles. "But the general conditions th.it creatt::d the cloudy weather ln the past are still holding and we expect them to hold for the foreseeuble future/' Nichols said. To tbe Orange Coast, which normally gets almost cloudless sky in July and August. this weather has been a shock. "It's the worst summer l've seen in 17 years as a lifeguard," said Huntington Beach Captain Douglas D'Amall. "I've got only one word for it - terrible," be said. "Even on the days when the sun does come out. it's usually only for few hours in the afternoon,'' D'Arnall said. Laguna Beach lifeguard captain Bruce Baird, a lifeguard since 1952, a.greed that thi s is the wurst summer than be has ever seen. "We've had only 10 days that l can lblnk of when the weather was decent," be said. Nichols forecast lhi$ n1oming that tht Orange COOst will see increasing cloudiness as tht'l: week continues with the sun coming out in the aftemoon if it comes out at all. "Of course memories can be deceiv- ing," said Nichols, who has been a southern California forecaster for 17 years, "but this is certainly the c:loudiest summer I can remember." The poor weather has been attributed , ~llY ,llot Stiff '""• 10 an unusuall y dense layer of cool and cloud-laden ocean air ·hovering over U1e COOSI. The marine air layers forms t!very summer, Nichols said. but normally is ooly about 1,000 fl.'t!t thick. Last weekend . however, it wall rneasured up to 3.000 feet thick, and Tuesday It was reported 1,500 feet thick. "If the layer is only 1.000 feet thick or so, the sun can generally burn it oft" said Nichols. "But if it is 3,000 fet'lt thick. there simply isn't enough tilne in the day for the sun to cut through it." Two reasons are given for the ab- nonnally trublesome marine air front. One is !hat ocean temperatures I his sum- mer are about two degrees cooler lhan Labor Da11 Pla1i CHP to On Bad By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ltll 011Uy !"Hot Staff Drinking drivers, ove r -fat igued motorists, drug-users, novice camper jockeys and highballing mobile home· haulers will be targets of Orange Coun- ty's Cj1lifornia Highway Patrol force for the 1973 Labor Day Weekend. Special. st£>pped·up traffic enforce1nent -with 102 officers on overtime shifts financed by federal fund grants -begins at midnight Thursday. Goal of the four-day crackdown unde r the Fatal Accident Reduction Through Enforcement (FARE) concept is to save negligent motorists from themselves , and to prote<:l otbers. ''By virtue of previous traffic collision experience, Orange County is a high risk area," CHP Public Information Officer Jerry Maxwell expl~ined. SNIFFING OUT SMOG-$5,000 MACHINE DETECTS OZONE LEVEL IN SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY San Juan Capistrano City Aide Join Nun1i1t1 Check1 Out New Device for Bad Air on Coast He said Capt. William A. Fradenburg has ordered 102 CHP ·officers to special extended duty convering specific hazard areas on county highways. The extra pay will be covered by $300,000 in federal grants administered San J nan Council Gives OK To Ne""· Gtu1 Ordinance San Juan Capistrano moved out of the frontier era thi s week -officially -as city councilmen approved a fireanns ordinance which means that shooting nrearms wiJI be restricted. The 3-1 vote Monday came with the la- nicnt from Councilman Josh Gammell that "i t is Hke the ending of an era" in th£> once-rural community . Gammell voted in favor of the code which restricts shooting to fanns, ai>- proved ranges and possible future "hunt- ing preserves." Councilman Edward Chermak cast the dissenting vote and gave no reason . The move, which came several weeks ago. was sparked by Mayor Roy Byrnes and Councilman James Weathers . Both men stressed that in their neighborhoods. stray shots have been noted . Smog Detecting Device Shows S. County Muck by the state to city and county lawmen. Despite a trend toward fewer fatalities on some holiday weekends in recent years, due to public awareness of the special highway dangers, California set a Labor Day Weekend record of 73 holiday- related deaths, last year. And Orange County -while its own Labor Day 1972 toll was about the same as an average weekend -is one of 40 .regions of California classed as a specific South Orange County's on1y smog- dctecting device "'ent into operation in the San Juan Capistrano Civic Center Tuesday and a1ready has shown some formidable ~entr.uions of air pollution. Although lhe $5,000 device's maiden voyage did not show enough jwtk in the air for a first-stage smog alert, it came somewhat close. The monitor -tv.·o separate electronic boxes costing fore lhan $5,000 -showed an ozone concentration shortly after the noon hour of .13 parts per million. A level of .20 parts per million generally sparks a first-stage alert. Supervisors OK Road Extension The device is ~n Joan -perhaps for a traffic trouble area. year or more -from the COWlty's Air "Locally. people can look for a little Pollution Control District and will give more ;heat' than usual," Officer Maxwell officials and curious citizens a chance to warned, in outlining the cHP battle plan see how far the southward invasion of for the four-day weekend commencing smog has progressed. at midnight Thursday. The city mad e the initial request for The CHP \\'ill put in 841 extra man- the loan of the device after City Coun-hours during the period . cilman James Thorpe raised the issue One of the special danger areas pegged about the Jack of air pcllution data for by CHP officers is the long, flat San the south county . Diego Free\vay route through south Or· ange County, where the unnoticed The only other monitor in the vicinity is speedonieter needle often c r e e p s in Irvine. dangerously past the posted limit. Initially, said City Manager Donald Santa Ana Canyon Road is also ex- Weidner, the plan was to install the pected to be a high risk thoroughfare device at Saddleback College . during the anticipated Friday night mass "But we stuck to our guns and finally exodus of motorists seeking holiday fun got the approval for city hall." he added . at inland camping and recreational The data which the monitor records on areas. a 24-hour basis will be made available to A similar situation is expected Monday anyooe who wants it and residents in-upon their return, with added hazards of terested in the concentration of smog at fatigue and the residue in some cases or any given hour may call city hall and ask holiday drinking. Plans for the extension of Campus for the figure . The growing array of recreation::rl Drive from University Drive to Jam-Weidner said that he hopes that the in· vehicles on the market and road today boree Boulevard were approved by the terest shown by cilizens in the in-has also complicated the CJiP role in Board or Supervisors 1\tesday. stallation will continue. traffic safet y l:H~· enforcentcnt. The roadway extension, long sought by ''Now we have to see if people will take Campers 1nouuted _ on heavy-duty. normal. which g.ives the sea more ability to cool the air passing over it. The second reason J:; that an • normal tow pressure area has developed over eastern California, Nevada, and Utah, leaving a vacuum in lhe coastal area that is filled by the Intruding layer of nlarine air. There is one possible benefit from all this cool weather. however: Nichols says that lhe conditions that often create lndi~n Summer heat wave.~ in Southern California do not seem to be developing. "I cannot say with certainty that we "'on 't have any beat waves in Sep.- tember." he said, "bot they do seem to 1 have less likelihood of developing this yea r lhan they have had in years pa~." Zero ·in Drivers ' '· trailers, and sport motorcycles all ·have , an in1pact on the situation. ~ "Take the inexperienced tr a i I er ~ own£>r," says Officer Maxwell, criticizing the fact many such weekend vacationers are not adequately trained in handling a l car or truck and trailer. ) • "He's really only ball a driver when he ' gets behind the wheel," Officer Maxwell 1 said. He said the same hazard can be blam· ed on some owners of camper rigs who pe:-haps drive them only rarely. "\Ve're not saying people shouldn't have such things," he explained, stress- ing the potential dangers due to too much ' confidence and too little practice. ·• And a substantial number of motorists hit the road in rented or OOrrowed recreational vehicles without adequate experience. .. A guy may drive a little VW for 29 days out of Ute month, and then be climbs into this tall, heavy monstrosity and does 65 down the fast Jane or' the 1 freeway ," said Officer Maxwell. The CHP officer -one of whose duties is releasing pres,, information ()11 1 all county traffic fatalities, which average one every 36 hours throughout the year -also n1entioned motorcycles. .H~· said the special task !°""' of Jl"lrolmeli assigne<l lo Labot. Day dlity undet the · FARE progrash will ,be watching for careless cyclists, ~Y those speeding or weaving in and ·out 4 traffic. He said that CHP officers won't be Strictly out to enforce traffic taWs With citations, but to help out in other ways. They expect to assist in many of tboee unforeseen cases that can mar anyone's holiday, such as vehicle breakdown& at the roadside which also create traffic hazards. ALICE B. TOKLAS BROWNIES AGAIN? l \ OLTEN, Switzerland (AP) -'ftlree · restaurant patrons were hospitalized and others became hysterical after eating aJ.. mc::J cookies passed around by a young man. Police said the cookies contained hashish. The young man claimed he had mistaken it for a spice, but ab.tborities booked him on a drug charge. PCBs are industrial chemicals tbot are used \.\'ldely in food manufacturing plants in the beat-treating process that destroys bacteria. Occasionally. as a result of in- dustrial acclde1Hs and \.\'!despread ex- istence in the environment, PCBs appear In food itself. First de,•eloped In 1929. these chemicals also are used as in- gredients in a broad range of products, Including paints, plastics, resins. inks, "'axes, adhesi,•es. rubbtr, asphalt and various buQdlng . materials. FDA 's rt- strlctloo Is based on results of lesls made on animals that show the snbjects sustained liver damage arter being ex- posed to high concentrations of PCBs in their diet. Although lhe effects to bumaM of low-level, lolig-term e1:posure are not tanwn; 1be nt\V regulatlom1 also establish acc;eptnble temporary PCB levels in products. Some appearance of PCBs Is unavoidable because the chemicals are 110 pervasf\'ely present in the en\'irGnmeRI. Delltli by Gator Brin.gs La1-0suit SARASOTA. Fla. (AP) -The father of 16-year-old Sharon Holmes is sulng Florida and concessionaires . at a st.ate park for $4.5 million. -claiming their negligence resulted in an alligator's fatal attack on his daughter. UC Irvine has an estimated cosl or an interest like they promised," he said. · k k I b I ho $998.980. The project includes a 1.16 mile =i;~~-~~i;iiii;~~~~;iiii;iiiij-f~P;•c;;:u;p:;;t~r:uc~·:s:_. ~':"·_:ge::_:m~o;;i~e:::;:;m~e~s~an~d~::::::;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;; ~::::ee:~hn: ~::~:n °t:: ::,:::: I,. .GEM T ALK1 ;;•. Pri11u on Wa11 DEAR PAT : In response to an ad· verlising offer from Teri paper towels, \\'hich I received by mail along with \-t packet of other sim ilar ads . I mailed an order on May I for three prints-on-can- vas or oil paintings by famous artists. enclosing a check for $15.95. The offer said to allow lhree weeks for delivery and I requested the canvases to be sent to mv mother In New Mexico. They have not arrived and I've lost the address where I sent the order. · R.1\1., Corona del A-Jar Don Fahl, a So uthern California dlvlslonal sales manager for Kimberly· Clark Corporallna, has telephoned ynu 11nd bis firm's headquarters at Ntenah, Wis. headquarters regardbig tbe. ml11sing canvases )'OU ordered for your mother. A headquarters 11pokesmnn then coptacttd me to offer assurance thl11 Ot'dtr Is recelvlng 1peedy . re-p rocessing, alnce Kimberly-Clark's records indlcaftd tbe r.anvase11 h:id been 11hipped prevtously. It was noled thot the coupon offer Indicated a fou,..to-six week deUvery p~rlMI and potnted out thot if you bed contacted Kimberly-Clark persnnolly. tlle delivery problem would have been inves:Ugated at your request. Anyone \\'hO can't recall the m~nufocturer of a particular product wlll find the parent company's no.me Usted on lhe produot'1 label. ' . FBI Arresl.8, 'Agent' WASIUNGTON (UPI! -'n1e FB I said today It arrested a 46-year<>ld U.S. 'citizen on charges of possessing an illegal electronic listening device and acting as an illegal foreign agent on behalf of Zam· bla . The FBI rinnouncentent ldentirled the n1an RS !\1nrshnll Soghoian. the city of Irvine whereby lhe city will I pay $150,000 for its share or the roadway The teen-age r was mau led to death by a 10-foot gator while swimming with her father Aug. 16 at Oscar Scherer State Park in what game officials say is the first documented case of such_a death in American history . was also approved. ~ ' Women in Protest; TODAY Council Meet Cleared '· by Bruton Holmes filed suit Tuesday in Sarasota County Circuit Court. It asks for $.1 n1illion from the Florida Department of Natural Resources for allowing s"'inuning in a lake "in the swampy area of the park which Was the natural habitat for the dangerous alligators.•· . . Holms' suit also asked for $1.5 million from the park's developer and a con- cessionaire. who so ld food to be fed by visitors to the alligators. ' BERKELEY tAP ) -Police cleared a City Council meeting of all but staff and reporters when '20 shouting feminists refused to quiet down . Mayor Warren Widener called police to the meeting Tuesday after the women demonstrators refused to stop waving signs, shouting and singing. They were protesting a woman librarian's dismissal [rdm the city library. There were no arrests, police said. Tiger on Loose But Escapee D~es11't Get Far A tiger escaped from Lion Country Saran in Irvine Tuesday -but he wasn't in any hurry to run away and bcrome a man-eater. . Dale Cloutier, assistant general mttnager of the anhnal preserve, stud gu11rds found the Uger sitting calmly under a tree In a parking lot les."I than GO feet from \Vhere he had escaped. A Lion Country cmploye tranquilized the animal and less than 30 mlnutes Inter he was b<.lck in the fenced wilderness. Few visitors hnd arrtved at the time, Cloutier said. _ "1'hls tiger Is very lame and getting pretty old." Cloutier said. The anlmal took advantage or a sccond's delay as guard closed a gate at the back of the pre$crve and leaped lhrou~h the gap. \outier snld the gate guard wns iired. The ousted guard said he eould have been mauled. "'1'hey need to fix up that back gale," he •dded. J. C. HUMPHRIES HERE AND THERE IN THE WORLD OF GEMS Russia, according to London sour· ces, has decided to sell diamonds through the world famous De Beers organization rather than going it alone in world markets. Reason? They can sell diamonds faster U1rough De Beers. "The Southern Star.'' a movie diamond, has been confused with ·"The Soulhern Cross," the rough 118 carat diamClnd found in Rrazil in 1929. Actually. "The Southern Stnr" never existed . Dian1oncls on the moon. accord· in~ to the National Aeronautic and .Spacecraft Cenlre in 1-lou~ton, Texas. arc hi2hly unllkely. Ex- t:remelv low carbon content or lu- nar material~ n1ak,.,c;; their discoverv there doublr111. 11ltho11 1th there i's ~ re111ote oo!'i:ib\litv ,.,at diamond hP'1riOlt l'l"ltllCrial~ mi!.!ht be round flt"I"'" tn fhe rent"'r of the moon. 'T'h,. Rf'l r iA n diam('lnd tr~<l ha!' lni:I In t'1P ):ll;lt f~W Vtiar~. 3.000 to 4.000 t1xneri,.ncAft rotl"fl;l to other rrio•,lril"~. nrinrinA11v li:rnrl rAll~· irio n rrfti1: If\ tht1 'Rel<'iAtl incl'l i:trv hecanc.-r. rr th~ difttr111tv of rPnlac· hl i! ~uch hi~hlv ski11Pd pef!nlc Lady Seiko z1114•1M. (',11 dlol, 7W~32M_ C'itt dial, The f1thion w1tchf1c• bv Ledv Soiko. J.C. 1823 NEWPORT BLVD .• COST A MESA CONVENIEN1 TERMS 27 lEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION l1nkAm11l11.1rd -M1ktf Ci-ar•• PHONE 5~1·1401 ·• 4 DAILY PILOT Reds Hold Congress, Back Mao ' HONG KONG (UPI) -The Com- .mwi.lt Party of Chlna, meetin1 in secret ...-In l'lldne. held Ila 10th National C<lagtosa Ind unanimously real!lrmed the leodenhip of Mao TS<>tung and Premier CJiou En-lal, acoonllnJ IO a communique lla!ocl -,. Tbe ....,,.....,, In effect, endoned the ~ta&O¥K.I program al.med at improving relations with the United States and took lhc unusual step of denouncing the Soviet Union by name. The Congress, rumored for the past few voee.ks. was held from Aug, 24-28. e B•lt So11ght HOUSTON IAP) -Lawyers for one of lu'O youths accused in the homosexual $1ayings ol Z7 persons say they will ask the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals to ( IN SHORT ... ) .,top a psychiatric examination ordered for tbeir client. Lawyers for Elmer \Vayne Henley, 17, said Tue>day they will ask the appeals oourt to block 1 mental examination for tbdr cllent after State District O>urt Jud(e W!Ulam M. Hatten relwed to Ut"IT ...... •1thdraw his AUJ. Z2 onler directed at ft.nn.f "'of•-pse both Henley end David Owen Brooks, I~ .,... " M& e Ml•nows Boru HOUSTON (UP[) -MilUIOWS born in space are adapted to zero gravity the moment ~y hatch from their tiny eggs. But their parents, carried aloft by the Skylab 2 crew, still are not accustomed to weightlessness and are swimming i11 tigh~ backwanl flips. "Thtse newly hatched minnows have oewr 4ane that," Astronaut OWen K. Ger· nou said T\lesday from the Skylab meucerie which now includes five min- ..,.. and a pair of wekpinning spider>. "It wu as if Ibey bad already adapted •iim they ....,.. still In the egg. And once b7'd bem batdled Ibey have no prob- l«m." e t'.-lls Slah1 ROANOKE, Va. (UPI) -A family of siJ: was found shot to death in their home Toelday olgbt, and police said It ap. peared to be a murder-suicide in which the father killed his wife and their four children. 1be vict.im.s were Charles M. Nail Sr., an imernployocl locUmith, his wife Sbarol, both about 29, and their four children. 'lbeir bodies were fOlDld in their three bedroom home in the northwestern part of this Virginia mountain city by a relative who bad gone to check on them. U.S. Will Move Marine U1iits 0(tt of Thaila1id WASHINGTON (UPI) -The United States will start moving virtually all the A-1arines it has in Thailand to Japan startit1g Thursday. 'Ibe Defense Department said Tuesday the %,100 Marines involved in the move are members or Marine Air Group 15. When they are redeployed, only about 100 Malmes will remain in Thailand. The pullout is being made under an ap-eement reached Friday between the United States and Thailand. Involved are about 3,550 U.S. military personnel and more than 100 aircraft that had been in- volved in the war in Southeast Asia. The Marine air group has 36 planes. Currently there are about 120 U.S. warplanes and 431000 servicemen sta- tioned in Thailand . One man died and 22 others were hurt when the roof of a New York subway collapsed Tuesday, caused a fire and trapped hundreds o! rush hour commuters. Temperatures in the tunnel rose to 115 de- grees on the hottest day of the year in the big city. Rescued Hostages in Bank Plead to Spru·e 2 Captors STOCKHOLM (UP I! -Police officers who broke into a bank vault Tuesday night and freed four hostages held for six days by two armed convicts, said today one of the woman hostages asked them not to harm the convicts. "After what they had been through in lhat vault, it's hard to understand the reaction," detective inspector Kurt Krantz said. POUCE physicians said the other hostages -two women and one man - were "apathetic like they had undergone a thorough brain washing." But Miss Kristin EMlark, 21. scream· ed, "-Don't kill them" when the police burst througll tht door. She was referring to Jan-Erik Olsson, the 32--year~ld convict who engineete<I the drama, and Clark Olof890n, his 26- year-old prisoo friend who aided him. "They never harmed us ," Miss Enmark told doctors at the hospital where she was taken. "I was more afraid the police would do something so we 'Ao'OUld be kit.led." There bad been nunors, denied by the police, that the women hostages had been repeatedly raped. Miss Enmark's state- ment apparently refuted this. THE VOLUNTEER officers, assigned to storm the vault anned with sawed off shotguns and knives after teargas had been injected. had orders to kill if nece~ry to save the hostages. "But the first we heard was one of the girls screaming: Don't kill them !" one of the officers said. Other police officials said the reaction was strange "considering the rough treatment the hostages had been sul> jected to lime and again." Bui Dr. Jan Agrell, a military Jl.!YChiatrist , said "we must understand that this woman has beeg ~qder severe stress ror several days and what she.s_,s now may not reflect the truth or what she might feel a few weeks from now ." The hostages were resting today in a Stockholm boopltal while Olssoo and Olofsson were being questioned by police. DURING TIIE dramatic last minutes of the ordeal Olsson fired one final burst of bu11ets at police from the 40-by-40 foot bank vault. Then, tears streaming down his face from the tear gas,'cried: "l glve up. I give up." That ended the 131-hour ordeal that bad the hostages pleading for their lives. Olofsson also surrendered without a struggle. Cliarge$ Weighed Against U1icle Of Rcice Clieater BOULDER, Colo. (UPI) -Dislrict At- torney AJer Hunter said Tuesday be may file charges of contributing to the delin · quency ol a minor against a man who ad· mitted he helped his nephew cheat to win the National Soap Box Derby. Robert Lange Sr., whose son Robert Jr., 19. \von the national derty in 1972, said he convinced the 1973 winner, James G1"0llen, 14, to install an electromagnet in his car to get a better start in the race. Gronen was disqualified t\lo. days after he ... .-on the Aug. 18 finals held in Akron , Ohio. Hunter said he and SUmmit County, Ohio, prosecutor Stephen Gaba.lac would decide if they would each file their own charges in their own states or whether one joint charge would be filed in Boulder. Heat Bakes Eastern U.S . . So1ne Rairi Falls ns Humidit y Spc1.rks Wil,d Weatlier l OWlll Ti•~tlAfUlll 0 " " .. "' " uP\ wt •IHll 1010C4U. night •nd morlllng !lours btcom!119 wt$I to JOUthwtst 12 lo 11 knots In •fttmoOl'I• lodly Ind lhurM11y, High loctay ""r 70, C01111I '-"'"ralur•s r~n(ll! from '' to 69. lllllilld f.mptf'1!11r•1 r1r191 from st to 75, Wttlt' tlmper1rur1 70. Suu, 'Moou, Tides WaDMaSDAY ' s~ hlOh ........... , IO:Otp.m, ._, SICOl'ICI IOw .......... 4:03 °'"'· 0,7 THUltlDJ.Y Flrsr high .............. 1t:4' '·""-.s.6 Flrlt low ............. 4:ll a.m. ....1 SICond high •..... , , .. , IO!S2 11.rn. J.J StcOl'ld low ........... 4:ft IJ,fft. • •• Sun ltlHI 6:2Aa.m. kt1 1:Uo.m. MOOl'I llllMt ''°' 1.m. 1111 l !tS '·"'" DA ILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE ·Delivery of Ill& Dai~ ~lot ~ itJlllllleed ---' "' .... "" ,. ... ~~·~ ..... ,. ...... • ~· • ... I* .. 11111 ... I;!,.._ SotorUJ ... , ' , ......... JW terr ., t ta. Slfwff1 • I IA !llUF. al "' I Ill! II ~ -• ,. ells .. lll• 111111 .... 1 elelllooes ' · ....... c.ty ........ Ml-011 .. __ .... .. _,. .......... "8-llll s._c.or-..... lo .. "'"1r• ... ,. 1o1t1 Ill• t ... llioll .. llHlll Spain · Crash l(ills 24 Military Cargo Jet Had Farriil~es Aboard ' I MADRID (UPI) -A U.S. Air Frirco Clll JOI transport p!W crashed 'an<! bunt into names 'l'uosday oliht on a landing awroach .to the huge Tomojon atmaoe.near Madrid. Tbe Air Force said IOdsy 21 ol the 25 pe-s aboard died ln- atanUy In the fiery ex)llOs!oo, • An Air Force spokesman said the sole survivor suffered a fractured leg and cuts, but bad a Jood cllaooe of living. It identified him as the plane's navigator, l•t Lt . William H. Ray, 25. of McGuire Air Force 'Base, N.J. THE GIANT four-engine Starli!ter cargo jet carried a crew « eight and 17 passengers. According IO the Spanish 'l<'WI agency Cifra, the dead included three women and witnesses reported that there a190 were children aboard. First Iran Truce Team Arrives in S. Vietnam SAJGON (UPI) -An Iranian advance team anived in Saigon today to prepare for replacing Cenada on the ioternaUonal truce team, but ran into ia series of stumbling blocks characteristic ol the stalled peace-keeping operations In Indochina . The five Iranians, led by Stall Col. Soltan Mohammad Etemad, arrived late at Tan Son Nhut alt1>0tt and had to wait in their plue another half bour while a special lounge was cleared. THE IRANIAN officers were then whisked away from the airJx>rt without stopping in the lounge and befoN! a waiting U.S. Embassy representative bad a chance to greet them. The visitors were taken by mistake to the IranJan ambassa.dor's residence and finally anived at their hotel two hours late. The advance team was expected to re- main in Saigon for two to seven days woiking out details for the arrival of Jran's full JSO.member 'COntingent to the International Commission of. Control and Supervislm (IOCS). Truce team oCOCials at Tan Son Nbut ,ail\iort ..pressed hope the Iranian ar- rival would get the coinmission back to work. The panel has been stalled for a mOnth since Canada polled out claiming the group was ineffective. . A SOlml Vietnamese Foreign Ministry spokesman said earlier Iran's delegation to the commission will be headed by Ambassador Assab Fadrri. 't.1eanwhile, in the cambodian capital of Phoom Penh, a terrorilll bomb ap. parently timed to go off during President Lon Nol 's news conference at the nearby presidential palace exploded in a busy market place today, killing three persons. It was the first teZTOrist attack in Phnom Penh in a week and a hall. Abbie Hoffman Seized in NY In Cocaine Sale NEW YORK (UPI) -Abbie Hoffman, a Chicago Seven defendant and founder of the Youth International Party {Ylp. pies ), was jailed Tuesday night on charges ol trying IO sell !500,000 worth of cocaine. Three olher persons were atTeSted with Hoffman. They were held and onlered IO appear in court today for arraigrvnent. POLICE SAID MOll'MAN said was worth s t reel. an undercover agent posing as a buyer arranged to pur· chase the illegal drug, a derivative of oplwn, In a downtown hotel. Po-- lice Lt. Robert MBM saki Hoffman had a grocery bag with three pounds of co- caine, which ~1ann about $500,000 on the 1'he detective Ylho set up the arrests said he had agreed to pay Hoffman 135.000. "It's called a 'buy and bust' in t~ trade," ?tfann said. Until the time ot ar- rest, MaM said "\Ve did not know about Hoffman." The news agency sald the passengers were families of U.S. aervlcemen living abroad and that they were on their way home. Tbo Military Airlift Command (MAC I jet wa.s en route from At.hens to McGuire Air Force Base in New Jersey , with <1 stop planned at the (\all! Torrejon airbase 40 miles from Madrid. The plane went down in a grove of oak trees between the vtllt.gq ot Huera and Pastrana, 22 miles from the Torrejon base, which ls operated jointly by the air forces of Spain and the United Slates. The Spanish Aviation Ministry said the plane "lost contact with the Torrejon control tower at 10:50 p.m ..•. and era.sh· ed near Hlleva, bursting into Oamrs on impact." i WITNESSES SA.ID there wws an e1 - ploslon and reported wreckage stre~ over a mile wide section of land. Spanish Police sealed off the crash site. Air Force sources said a U.S. F·4 Phantom jet fighter pilot flew over the stricken plane just before it went down for Y.11at was described as en emergency landing. "It seemed to land all right, but then bounced up and broke up , bursting into names." the pilot was quoted as sayin&. Spanish news reports said the survivor "'as rescued from the wreckage of tht plane's nose by villagers y,•ho arrived on the scene. ''lie was apperenUy ejected from the aircraft oo impact and suffered multiple fractures cl. the left leg end multiple con· tusioru," the A.Ir Force said. "He is listed as being in relatively stable condition and is expected lo recover.'' He was MJSbed to a Spanish hospital at lbe nearby to\.\'l'I of Guadalajara. then transferred to the base hospital at Tor· re}on. THE BODIES of the vic tin1s \Vere laken to a morgue at the base. The crash was the second air disaster in Spain within 16 days. On August 13, a Spanish airliner crashed while at- tempUng to land at fog-shrwded La Corona airport, killing all 8S persons aboard and one person on the ground. The Air Force said in a statement that the last crash involving MAC that resulted in fatalities to passengers oc. curred in 1965, and since then MAC aircraft have Oo\\ll mort than 6.6 million hours without a passenger fatality. The cause of the accident has not been determined. but a boanl of Air r"or<e ol· ficers will be convened to investigate, the statement said. THE WORLD'S CH DE81 WHISKEY PRESINIS THE WORLD'S OLDEST MAN. I'VE BEEN ASKED TO LIST SOME OF THE BEST THINGS THAT EVER HAPPENED TO ME. HE RE GOES .•. BIKINIS, DRIVE·IN MOVIES, TH E WHEEL, DEVILED EGGS, MEDICATED POWDER (DID I SUFFER FROM TOGA CHAFING)! AND BUSMMILLS. WH1'N THEY MADE IT .IN I608, "THEY DIDN'T REALIZE WHAT THEY WERE DOING FOR MY LEISURE HOURS! GEE, I HOPE WE HAVE A LOT OF LEISURE HOURS! Lll<E A BUSHMIU.S SOUR, REAL LY SMOOTH! A BUSHMILLS MIST, COO\. AND MILD ! A BUSHMILLS LONG ANO TALL. A BUSHMtLLS ROB ROY, /JS LIGHT ;-- AS ANY SCOTCH CAN MAKE IT! ••• • • ' • • ' " DAILY PILOT. $ r 'Owes $4.4 M·illion' Bedayan Innocent -. Through lnsanitr SAN RAFAEL (AP) -A ]W'Y has found 22-year-old Brent Bedayan innocent by reason of insanity of shotgun· nlng a Mil) Valley family to death last October. Ibis was not an insane a.ct by a young boy wbo had nothing to gain, tben there are no legally insane people in the state of California. Hughes Files Countersuit Agaii1st Ex-chief Maheu I '1Jt was clear that Bedayan did have a psychotic delusion about l>aooy and the1·e was some question about his fathtt as the enforcer," said jury foreman Dale A. Stopp after announcing the verdict Tues- day. "BUT WE couldn't· find any clearcut reason why he killed Rulh. That 's when we found him insane," Stopp said. Bedayan had been accused ol killing Melvin Schallock, 61, bj.s wife Ruth. 56, and his son, Daniel, 2<1, last March 161 and then burning their home. 'fbe seven-woman, five-man jury deliberated a little ove.r: four hours Tuesday before finding Bedayan legally insane. The same jury had convicted Bedayan on three counts of voluntary manSiaughter Mon- day evening in the "guilt" phase of the trial. WHEN MARIN Cowily Dist. "I want to \hank you for Mr. and Mrs. Bedayan" Cox said. "I doo't think Brent can thank you now." "THE COURT'S Instructions to the Jury dlr«:ted them to return a verdict of voluntary manslaughter," Bales said. LOS ANGELES (API -At- torneys for Howard Hughes contend that Robert A. Maheu., the deposed chief of Hughes' Nevada. empire, · owes the recluse . billionaire more than $4.4 million. Hughes' SUmma Corp. at- ¢orneys listed the sum \Yhen they gave notice in federal tourt Tuesday th<1t they ~vould file a counter-complaint Sept. l{ against 1i1aheu, who is seek· ing $13.7 million damages in a libel suit against 11ughes Tool Co. AlAHEU FILED his suit in federal court two months after the January 1971 telephonic "The results would have been different if lhe judge had given them my felony-murder instructions, which would have made the theory of diminished capacity irrelevant." In the 20 days of trial testimony, Bedayan was label- ed a parano1d-schizophreruc by Biking tor F11nds Dead Fire Fighter's Ashes To Be Spread five psychiatrists. They said he had delusions of pain im-Eighteen bicycle riders from Sacramento, between 15 and 22 years-old, are bik- pulses sent telephatically from Daniel Schallock and saw the ing across the country. The group, pedaling past the Capitol Tuesday, hopes to elder Schallock as a gangland-forestall curtailment of Red Cross services in Sacramento. type "enforcer." -------------------------------- Kmnapedll-year-old Home Again SACRAMENTO (AP I -The ashes of a 21-year-old San Diegoan who died fighting a fire in the mountainous Big Sur area will be sCattered in that same region by his fellow fire fighters, a s t a t e spokesman said. Jack O'Neal. spokesman £or the state Department o f Conservation, said Tuesdav the ashes of Danny Hyme will be spread Thursday night by LOS ANGELES (Af). -r-district attorney's office . said are filed later today. He has was anxious to get some California Ecology Corps fire Nearly a week after her kid· Robert Lee Ray, 49, would be been booked for investigation privacy and thanked police fighters. nap, 11-ycar-old Tracy Gayle arraigned in Van Nu y s of kidnaping in the case . and the news media for help in The ash spreading will take corpsmen conduct an eveniog men1orial service in his honor in the Big Sur State Park. O't\eal said . He reported Hy me 's mother requested the action. Hyme worked for the corps for 14 months and was based at the state agency's Los Osos Center nea r San Luis Obispo before his death Sunday. His body has already been cremated and his ashes are being stored at the l\fission ~fortuary In Monterey, O'Neal said. news conference by a man who said he w3s Hughes. f\.faheu said he was libeled when the man expl ained the reas on s for Maheu's discharge . r.ilaheu's suit is scheduled to come to trial before U.S. District Court J udge Harry Pregerson Oct. 23 . J1 Pregerson requested .the a9' cowi!lng of funds which at~ torneys for Hughes' Smnmfl Corp. contend are owed to Hughes by 1i1 aheu . ''1 SUMAIA COR P. is the wholly owned Hughes' firm which hold s title to Hughes', Las ,Vegas holdings. _ ' The court filing says Maheu owes H u ghe s $4,458,474.3{1. That sum includes $2,120,000 paid Mciheu when he \Vas Hughes' top executive in Nevada from 1967 to 1970. Maheu's attorney. Morton Galane, said in Las Vegas that l\1aheu would not commen t. ' "The propriety of M r , 1 Maheu's conduct will be decid- ed by a jury of ·his peers,"' Galane said in a telephone in. terview. Atty. Bruce Bales asked Tues- day that the jury he polled, each member affirmed the in- nocent verdict by reasons of insanity on all three counts. Grcenfleld was home again to-Municipal Court after charges The fathe r said his family the case . place after Hyme's fellow day. released from hospital __ __:_ ______ ::_ __________ _:__ __________ _.:c_ ____ .:_ _________________ ------- Marin County Superior Court Judge Henry J . Broderick-Immediately turned Bedayan over to the st.ate Department of M e n t a I Hygiene for transfer to a California mental facilit y. He called the verdict "a sound re9Jlt in the case." Before they beyP·1 1clibera- tions, Bales had to!· he jurors that "at the critical motncnt, Brent Bedayan could have stopped. But he consciously chooe not to ." BEDAY AN, slouched in his chair beside public defender Frank Cox, showed virtually no emotion as the verdict was rea d and the illl'Y Polled . O:ix had compared his client to a "pressure cooker" that "blew up." He said' that "if Doctor Get.Iii Fraud ~ap LONG BEACll;(APl -A Long Beach doctor bu been indicted on charges ,,.. o f Pi.ftdicare fraud in connection with a hospital he owned here. Dr. Phil Hansen , 64, and t~·o hospital employes were charg- ed in 21 COlttllS 0 f misrepresenting to the Social Security Administration "the reimbursable costs incurred by the hospital in order to fraudulently obtai n 1i1edicare funds," the U.S. Attorney's of- fice said Tuesday. Hansen owned the 99-bed. Woodruff Community Hospital rrom 1966 to 1972. The in- dictment! followed a 17-month federal ·grand j u r y in- vestigation, the U.S. attorney said. treatment for a drugging, beating and rape. "Don't ever get into a ca r with someone you d o n ' t know." her father , Henry Greenfield, s:iid in a "'aming for other chi ldren as the girl lef t UC'LA Medical Center Tuesday clutching a big toy · stuffed dog. "Don't hitchhike," the J\1ission Hills father said. The girl said after she was found abandoned in Marina Del Rey last Friday that a man had given her $2 to help distribu te advertising leanets. Meanwhile, the c ount y 01tu·ch Sa)'S Boy's Deatl1 'Extreme' BARSTOW l UPll -The death 'Of 11-year-old Wesley Parker tast week, after his parents threw away t h e diabetic youth's insulin supply, wns deplored, Tuesday by a 1poketman for the. As&mlblies of God Churches in Southern Califomi8.. The Rev. W i 11 i am H. Robertson . district superin- tendent of th e sect, said while his church "believes in divine healing,·~ it does not "endorse or condone the throwing a\vay of life-saving medication merely because the individ ual is presumed healed." Robertson said, "\Ve do not identify Ytitb those \\'ho take extreme positions of failing to follow a common sense way or life and "'ould not feel that an extreme position in this re- gard brings any particular glory to God, nor does it re- flect to the credit of the church." -.. llttol-Wtttt• Ullttt- 11,IOO I• .. ••• tllt Strff Kut tt •• Stlt..,l M•tel, Cltt:u en.. •11 lhitr• '1 I >I' Ltw Prlcts Continue Throupaut Our 8lh Bi& Ye11. c,., Ctltllnte 0111 HUGE CASINO EXPANSION! ..-1NOI. 1Ml ...... WllTWA..0 HO r.oTlt.I DI ,,.,.<, ' hlMll.flltll• ... ~~~~=---.....:~---.....:G~,~~B~"':0~lJR~.PJ\M~/~l.Y.~, ~~0~~~E~0N~o~e~~~. \'t~'5=---:::;::;: I ,': ~ /I I . I I I I I ;///~ Labor Day Weekend Saturday and· Sunday g a.m. • 10 p.m., Monday") a.m.• 7:30 p.m. Featuring eontinuous eountry Western Entertainment by: THE LARRY 600TH 81\NO ITOP RATED ARTISTS FOR CAPITOL RECORDS) and THE BRUSH 1\R80R 81\NO Free old fashioned hayrides every day for kids 4-12, (RECENTLY SEEN ON NBCS ''MUSfC COUNTRY') Fleet-fooled frolickin' and fancy steppin' (A square dance jamboree) PLUS Eye-poppin' fireworks Salurday 'n Sunday nights. ' . SIDE·Sl?LITTIN' l\NTK2S l\ND el\RRYIN'ElN MElST IN<:!REDIBLE FEJ\T EVER l?ERFeRMED INeRSOIBl.E U!l\l'IN'eRITTBRS (NEW SHAM1J FOR MAYOR SHOW) DMl'H -OOPYING OttlBLE KITE FU'l\T 800 FEET JAIRDEVIL JIM RUSING & THE SKY FOX) (THE AQUAMANIACS-WflH THE NATION'S HIGHEST t-nGH DIVE-84 FEEll BY Ml\N l\ND l\NIMl\L. (THE SHAMU RtDEJUMPI 1\LL FE)R 0NE L0W PRleE 1\T SFAWORLD. MISSleN mw. 57\N DlEGe ' I ' ' I I I • • 8 DARY PILOT EDIT ORIAL PAGE Fortunate Once a showplace !or movie stars and later a flop- house for transients, Laguna's Hacienda Hotel now Is headed for a new -and once agai n respectable - future. The hotel, now known as La Casa Nova, has been purchased for $300,000 by Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Price, 13-year residents of the Art Colony. · They plan to spend no less than $50,000 converting the landmark into a residence for UC Irvine students. Local law enforcement officials, mindful of the lurid past of the Hacienda, applauded announcement of the sale and plans for new tenants. UCI student housing officials. likewise. were de- lighted with the news. Since the campus opened, they've been faced with telling students there's no such thing as low-cost student housing in Laguna Beach. University officials say they'd like to tour the hotel and, if possible, give it a stamp of approval. The Prices already have made It clear they want occupants of the hotel to be full-time students as a means of screening for a respectable clientele. The sale Is a rnilestone. It's helpea cool Laguna'• transient problem and provide student housing. Both have been needed for a long time. 'Sla ughter Alley ' Again Several years ago when state engineers deemed the new freeway between San Clemente and Oceanside completed, everyone put aside its label as "Slaughter ' Alley." The death rate, they hoped, would drop dramatical· ly on the long stretch which in previous years had been marred by some of the most tragic crashes in the state. Recently the California Highway Patrol resurrected the nickname, because the death rate is climbing to the levels of bygone days. During the first half of the year, eight persons died Electronic 'Bugs' Could Backfire TO the Editor : Newj>ort Beach Police Chief Ja-' Glavas ha1 proposed a citywide burglary alarm network via cable television which would link every home and business in ·• ~ this city directly to police headquarters. ·' The chief pointed out that a variety or sensors could be installed by private firms to signal illegal eritry, fire, etc. He specifically stated that the police would ilwpect such installatiON. I feel it is im- perative to point out to the citizens or Newport Beach (Ii> thele times of \Vatergate)•lhat ihefe exfus the poteoUal ror electremC eaveidropplng at any time of the day or rugbt directly by the potice department. . A LARGE variety or •'bugging devioet'' could be affixed to such a system sumpttt!Qusly and allow direct monitorinc at police headquarters or any and all qoaversations in every single home.and buslness in this entire city_ I do not suggest that the chier or anyme in our city government is remote- ly oonildering such application of this c<.ble television alarm network ; however, the'.&.ntJal exists. Times change , police ctt:.11 Come and go, and political v.1nds shift. M9 bugging of residences could be im~ted at any time by political fiat. r' ·· · · IN ADDmoN, I would Uke to call your attention to the events of southeast Asia in 1987 when then Secretary of Defense Robert Strange McNamara announced the coaatructi9n or a sophisticated elec- tronic. aurvelllan~interdictlon 1 i n e aCl'OA t be 17th parallel. Th e )ll1l1l<!le of 11.!J highly sophisticated electronic Laterdlction system (cocle name: Project Mussel Shoals) was to stop or, at least, markedly impede the flow of men and material irom North to South Vietnam. Portions of this electronic su rveillance system bear similarities to the proposed burglar alann system pro- posed by Chief GJavas. Among the com- ponents of this electronic line were seismic sensors \\'hich triggered land mines in resJ'.)Oilse to the vibration of human footsteps . trucks, and vehicles but '~'ere capable or electronically rejecting the seiamic vibration of the ubiquitous water buffalo. This system v.·as installed across the 17th parallel ;. .. an estimated cost or \veil in e1cess of two billion dollars. In short order, the very unsophisticated North Vietnamese found that they could very re:idJly ride water buffalo across the line. I ~'OUld merely point out that no matter how sophisticated the sensor system of a burglar alarm net'i'-'Otk is, proressional crhnlnaJs ~even simple rlce rarmers on occasion) can find ways to avoid it. DONALD R. STEELE, M.D. Heights 'Butelaer ed' To the Editor: As a homeo\mer In the Arch Beach Heights area, I'm appelled that th• plan- ning conurtisslon and the city council have not put a bbllding moratorium on 1he e.nlire hill unUI a suitable general plan has been worked out for the area. 1be committee appolllted by the COUDcil ID wort out a pion !or the atta Is largely made up ti cont.ractors and realton, making It Impossible for the few rtsldents. on the committee. lo get fovornble Uvin& COlldlUOll.I e1·en con· ·-BY TUB time ony ~ ls ~ the ""1re bill will !Je butchered wl1h -U,.,, coll "!mprovemeni..." The city at Laguna Beach b 11 fault for not P<Ohlbltlng coostructiCln of homes on 2>- loot loll. Not only bea\!IR of the fire MAILBOX Let ters from readers are welcome. Normally wrtters should convey tlieir messages in 300 word.! or less. The right to conde-nse let.ters to fit space or elimitiate libel is reserved. AIL letters must include sig11att4re and nwiling addres!, but names may be withheld on request if sufficie1i.i reason is apparent. Poetry will not be p11blis1led. hazard, es stated by t.he Laguna Beach Fire Deparlmen~ but also because the accessibility of the hilltop commwlity is minimal. . The city of Laguna Beach should recognize Arch Beach Heights aa a part of this picturesque community and rec- tify the mistake of allowing building on such inadequate lots, since its acquisition of the property from the county. It seems that money speaks louder than safety and beauty! MRS. STEVEN LA YCHAK A 11to Tyranny To the Editor: Sooner or later, the tyranny of "automobile consciousness" must cease. Surely You are aware of the obviously negative effects o: our attachment to the motor car. In the fa ce or this chaos, there really is only one thing to say: No. NO TO l\fORE l\IETERS, no to more monies made from meters, no to more parking spaces, no to any building (however "tasteful'') to holl!e more un- necessary automobiles. Before we can talk about ''solutions" to our problems of urbanization, we must say no to the patently obvious patt~rns or our own seU-dest.ruction. JEREMIAH BOWDEN V 11atable ltlan To the Editor: Poor Ronnld Ziegler. No\v, he has the hazard or bodily hann added to the other humiliating burdens of serving as devoted slave and court fool to a presi- dent who appears to be confll<iing himself \\'ith one of the testier early English kings. ASIDE FROM what happens to Mr. Ziegler and his pride -or lack of it - this country just cannot afford to keep such an unstable man as Richard Nixon in office. and the sooner wo recognize it the better. Since he will never let go his crown and sceptre voluntarily, the only answer ls to grasp the nettle und im· peach him. MARGARET NOLEN ~--1111 George ---. Dear licorgc: \Vhen you "'c.rc young did you lhink you had to alw11ys make pa!ises at girls to be "with it" and popular? CLARA Dear Clara : Actually, I never cared much about being popular. I Ju•t did oil that becaUJe I like girb (How did you find out, anyhow ?) (Write to George for reliel from nervous tension. Learn the secret >f Sideways Thinking. ni.n )'<lU'll have calm tension. in traffi c mishaps there. During the same period ol 1912 only one person died In the same stretch. The reasons for the increase baffle some experts. Nonetheless, It must be conceded that alien acUvlty near the San Onofre Border Patrol station io one contributor. 01 the eight deaths, four Involved Immigrants struck whlle running across crowded Janes to avoid federal '-..... agents. . The CHP plans to beef up patrols with seven new cars in an effort to stem the death rate. The state De- partment of Transportation also will become involved, surveying the road to see if improvements can be engl· neered. Every effort should be made w reduce the grim stati stics. Deserves Consideration Jl is unfortunate for Laguna Niguel that reasoned analysis of a good idea has been hampered by personal- ity clashes. Jim Thompson. president of the Laguna Niguel Homeowners and Comn1unity Association, presented a proposal for a municipal advisory council (1t1AC), an elected advisory body to the cou nty, to his board of direc- tors last week. His idea stood little chance for an objective response. Many members had their hackles up before be began, apparenUy irritated that he had presented his proposal to the press first. Fortunately, the MAC proposal is still alive to the point that a committee has been formed to study It. Aside from Thompson's tactics in presenting it, which admittedly sometimes have been awkward, the MAC concept is promising and deserves careful consider- ation. ' mas &AL~ ·- JJ't'd·' 7 Laguna Niguel needs better representation. That need should take priority over personal reactions to the release of the information. s 'You men behind m e k eep all eye out for bushwhackers/' Deat· Gloo111v Gu s \Viii somebody please print a hard- to--get-off but easy-to-apply bumper stjcker that says "PARKING SLOB" so I can quickly affix It to cars that clog driveways to laWl- dromats, markets and the ibke \vhere the rest of us citizens use' the proper parking slots? I'll buy a dozen! J.M. GlloOl'l'IY GU1 commeflb •r• 111tlmint11 tly rt1d1r1 •nd ff not ntC~.,,11,. r9'1Kt ltlt 'l'llWI ol lfll IMW\Plptr, Stncl 1'1\lr ,,, lffYI IO Gloomy G\11, D•lty Piiot, Good News For Ailing Globetrotters ~YDNEY J.HARRISJ The happiest news for v.·orld travelers since the invention or Dramamine was reported recently by the World Medical Association, which is distributing a pocket-size guide to English-speaking doctors in more than 70 countries around the world. This International Medical Directory will be more help lo Ameri cans than to anybody else, since we are notoriously the worst linguists since the Tasmanin'ls faded from sight. An A1nerican abroad can scarcely ask a waiter for a glass of water, much less describe an abdominal pain or an allergy to penicillin to a foreign doctor. The problem is made doubly acute by the melancholy fact that foreign ·~Jctors. in my biase d opinion, are gene rally ln- terlor to the American b r e e d _ Diagnostically and technically speaking, we turn out the most proficient me<Ucal men (if not \\'omen) in the world. NOT ONLY DO our standards mm to be higher, but we are relatJvely [ree from the medical paranoia that Is rampant in ' so many other countries. The French , for instance, are, still obsessed with "liver"'; almost any complaint you have that can't be easily diagnosed is relegated to the liver in France. When 1 suffered a nasty case of sunstroke at Cannes some years ngo, two doctors solemnly assured me it \Vas a liver malaise. "No. no." I insisted, 11C'est le coup de soleil." They both laughed nastily; everyone knows that mad dogs . Englishmen, and Arnerlcan tourists always go out in the mld·day heat and are impervious to i:;unstroke. It wns 24 hours before l could get them to stup treating me for mnlndl~ de fole . \Vlthout my rudimentary French, it might ha\'e been n week, EVERY COUNTRY seems to have It• favorite ailment. 2' a sort of grab bag into which its doctors throw any n1ysterious, obscure, or unusual syn· dromes . The art of the differential diagnosis has been brought to such a high level Ill the U.S. that we have become spoiled and forget how casually hit-or- mis,, a doctor can diagnose us In Madapscar er Morocco. There Is really nothing worse than a medJcal emergem:y when you are In a forolin CO\lll!n'.; your xeoophilla qulcltly n;., out the window, ond all your old ehauvin~tlc feelings come back tbroUgh the door. Sl.UTOWlded by seven of Europe's most ooted 1peclall..ts, you still wi!h that Marcus Welby would stride into the room and straighten them all out. Boats, Pla1aes A id S11atcgglers New Drug Traffic Tricks \\IASHINGTON -The• government's war .against drug smuggling, 1ru1npetcd as one or the major domestic successes of the Nixon Administration, is losing the battle tq. fl eets of small private planes and fast boats. CIEiSsified documents from t h e Customs Bureau made available to us demonstrate the ex- tent of the govern- ment's failutt . They flatly state that the narcotics agents can- not compete with the ingenuity of t~ smugglers. The dope runners have organized the m o s t important small boat operation since the evacuation of Dunkirk and the government's fra g- mented narcotics forces are wiable to cope with them. "WE l\tUST undertake a program to provide-customs control of small boat traffic entering the United States," one of the documents asserts. ''Smuggling of narcotic drugs by small boats is a serious problem . At present, we have no means of effectin'g interdiction of drugs entering the United States by this means." The high flying dope peddlers operate with equal freedom, hauling their cargo of white powder from 1.fexico and 'Canada with virtually no opposition. "Smuggling by means of priVate aircraft has grown iri .a situation Where' control of this commerce. for technical reasons. \Vas not posslble," the documents said. In short, the situation is so out of hand thal h1afia and free-lance traffickers ha\'e virtual carte blanchc to haul their \\'ares across the United States borders. FEDERAL antinarcotics officials have made elaborate plans to increase their erficiency in the air and on the water, but budget conscious bureaucrats have cut out this capability. For this fiscal year alone, t)ie Office of Management and Budget has sliced the Customs budget for these plans from $11.4 million to $3.3 million. This peMy-wise polJcy is preventing narcotics agents from acquiring sophJ.s. ticated tools. including alrcraft wltb special tracking equipment. boat. fast enough to catch smugglers' craft and sensors to seek out the doPe runners. The drug fighters are u,,ing some elec· tronic sensors borrowed from the military, but find them virtually worth- less. "To dale, sensors available for boat surveillance have been rudimentary in nature," one Customs report .!ltates. "This situation exists because or the lack of developmental funding and technical capability tbal has ellsted for years , within the CUstoms Agency Service." THE REA VIL Y publicized seizures or millions of dollars worth or r.arcolics are largely the work or old-fashioned customs and narcotics agents at port.I or elsewhere, based on leads Crom palllltak· lngly nurtured Informants. Arrerts of smugglers through random checka of small planes or boats have been few aod inf requent. Presently, the air-sea D;ht against drugs ls blldly fragmented _belween Cultorna at the Treuury Department and the new Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) at tbe Justice Department. A memorandum dtscrlblng a meeting last month between CUstoms' air intrusion coordinators and George Brosan, a top Customs enforcement of. flcial. makes clear that neither agency knows \\'hat the other ii doing. mERE ARE about so planes ol various kinds avallable at any ooe time to the h"o agencies for air and boat surveillance. But \\'\thout cooperation bet\\-een them throua:h me of informer• who signal the departure of a ablpment from some ;onety harbor or airport, the planes are useless. 'Ibey cannot "pkketr llne" the entire border. DEA . which may wind up with the \\'hole program eventually, l1 too busy reorganizing to lake on any new duties, particularly ones u complicated u the "Air Intrusion" optration. The overall mess Is best summed up by • Brosan : ··Both the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Immigration and Naturalli.ation Service have token pro- grams. Nelther can compare with the present Customs effort, and posa!bly some thought ought to be glveo to com: bining the three programs." Safety, But Not Tyranny • Every Jaw-abiding citizen has a right to feel aafe in his home, and hill person - whether on th! street, in the park or in his car. And, he has a right to expect that bis government provide that safety. But last year there were more than 800,000 felony crimes in California. The crime rate has Jn·· creased nearly 200 percent in the pot 10 years. Crime is the number one pub- lic concern. Because of that In September, l 9 7 2. Gov. Reagan named i five-member Select Committee on Law Enforcement Problems and charged It to develop recommendations on bow best to fight crime. After 10 months of digging Into the prol>- lem, the task force has issued Its 164· page report. It contuins a wide range of slgn1Ilcant and rar-reachJng recom· mendations: --CREATION of a Public Safety Agen· cy to consolidnte state Jaw enforcement functions (highway patrol, pri!On!I, emergency services, etc.); -Establish the state policy that criminals who u8e firearrnl during a crime must go to prl9on. without chance of probation: ·-Prison sbould bt the general rule, rather than the exception, for convicted narcotics peddlen. C.Onvlclion r 0 r po,..ssion or sale of heroin ohould bring mandalol)I imprliOruneot with Utile hope of probation : -It should be 1 mloclemeanor, without exception, for a pe:non to drive a vehicle wben his blood alcohol conteot Is 0.10 percent or higher, and -911 sbould be the official stalcwlde ( RUS WALTON J and local Emergency Telephone Number in case of crlme . (ire or accident. POINTING to the need for criminal justice that Is swift. certain and strong - but that it is now !Slow, uncert ain and in- effectual -the Task Force. urged reforms to insure speedy trials: -Reclaa!Jify minor traffic violations and shift them from the courts to In· formal summary procedurc11; -GIVe priority to cases involving opiates and dangcrou.a drugs ; -Permit 11lx-member Juries for mlldt'- meanors and felonies not punishable by JUe imprisonment or death and -Authorize verdicts by a flve-1l1th jury majority, except for capital punish- ment, and -Dispose of cases In favor or the defendant unless the matter goes to trial within 60 days. Jn the area of prison tenn1 and cor- rectional institutions, the T111k Force urged that the state's ill-eoncelvod pro- bation 8Ubsldy program be cancelled. The committee also urged that work be made mandatory for au prlaon Inmate• e1oept where security requirements make It impossible. THE f\tOST controveriaaJ recom· mendatioo coils for the abollUon..of the so-called exclusionary rule. Thdt .rule bolds that evidence ob!lllned throu&h II· leial aeard1 and selan II !llldmllllble In coort. Tru" the rule of txcluslon la olten lded lo thwart justice. But, the problein rests ' not so much with the rule as with tho!~ judges who twist it to coddle thd crl minal. " The solution is not to remove that im • portant citl7.en potectlon: the aolutlCll I• to establish firm parameters wtthi'l which the rule of exclusion can be a pUed. . It la indeed, the ftrot and foremost dut)l of governmen t to protect us from tboalt who would prey upon u,,. That's whal government Is all about. But, we mud take care lest the crime1 ci the felon anl r:eplaced by the tyraMy of government! Such a trade ls not nceesaary. And, in th!i pursuit of Justice, It would bt "" dubious merit. ~ I DAILY PILOT lJ..JLY PILOT 7 QUEENIE B Phil lnterlandl Pofice~ .flays •Butt·le It Out' ""m Wire lervlc11 Nl\V YORK -It w11 WoodllOCk In tho blHehm .. a pollce ooftblll l11m t>atlltd 18•Y acllvlll oppononll on-a oroenwlch Vllla11 pllylfOwid -all In lhe cause of un· dt rttandlnl. Tho team from the Ith Pttclnct won IM Monday nlll\t over lhe hom01exUal Mallaehlne Society team, but about 20 pollce complained about S•Y "brutallty" at tho end of lhe aamo. THE POLICE gripe wu • t:1at their o lDonents had garbage cans filled with beer en their bench. The police had to make do wlth soda. 'nle game WAI or11nlicd to f01ter bettor rolatlon1 between polloo In the vllloge and lho gay community. Whatever the purpose, about 500 fana loved it even though they were decidedly pro-Mat· tachlne. THE COPS TO a mo.n wore blue dungaree•. blue 1hirtl and red caps. The Mattachlne team, made up of both m~n and women, wore lots or things. The blot part !or 'the Mat- tachlne1 wa1 when the cop1 came to bat IJi_lhe. top oL lhe first inning. The muscular I e a d o ff patrolman tapped the plate with authority and leaned into the first pitch. Hips and shoulders swtveled, then his arms swept forward and the wrl111. lubed the bat through the strlke zone. THE BALL dribbled back to the pitcher. The bleachers wtnt wild . The pitcher threw to fi rs t baaeperson Cheri, who tried to step on the bag and mls11ed. Sh• then.-~uabed her blonde hair out or her eyes and made the ~utout. The fans cheered. But aftor that, It wu all downhill for the Mattachinc1. AT ntE END, officer John Romani , pitcher and coach of the 8lh Precinct team, could af!ord to be magn anlmow;. "Win or Jose. it was bound to make for better feelings in the co mmunity." A player for the Matta"hines took the dtfeat I e s s philosophically. "Ah, shaddup," he said. TllE PICKUP team assembled from "various gay bars" in the Village featured players or both sexes, inch.Id· ing Cheri Henri. a buxom blonde who earns her living a1 a topleaa dancer, at first base. A number of rhubarbs erupt~ during the game, in· cludina one over the bats used by the police . • "Their bats are too heavy," Wisted Mama Jean DeVente, manager of the &•Y ttant. '"These guys are in a charity game and they ha'te to lll!_ heavy bats ," she 11ld. The crowd in tht stand! agr<ed. "Ca ll a cop, call a cop," they chanted. BUT ~1AMA Jean did have one Kood word lor Romani. 1 "He '• been pitching to Iha women u l[ they were men and that's the way I like it/' 1he said. "I don't want . Jo 'look -lbll)''n . Ut1np '0.0lll m" youth!'' . .. ... ' ' ·Tax Plan Probed. Re agan Attacks Back-to-school in style with the layered look for boys. Analyst's Study SACRAMENTO (AP) Cr0v. Ronald Reagan has ac- cused nonpartisan Legislative Analyst A. Alan I!oat of deliberttely dlotortlni 1 flnan· cial anaylell of Reagan's tu control inlUaUve. 1be Republlotn chief 11· ecutive sald Tueaday that POlt was trylnl to decolV<! the public, whfdt will vote on the initiative NOY. &. REPUBIJCAN l•adara In the senate 11\d Al•embly dcfendtd POil against Reagan'• att.ack and Co11jecture Under Fire By Reagan · SACRAMENTO (AP) - Gov. Ronald Reagan says he's given no thought about being nQminated for vice president in the event Vice President Spiro T. Agnew is forced to resign. u1•M NOT going to deal in hypotheticals of that kind," Reagan !old a news con- ference Tuesday. "I think that everyone should hope there w~ld be no need ror his resignlng." Agnew is under investigation In f\.taryland in connection With alleged political playoffs. He has denounced s u c h report• as "damned lies" and said he bas no intention of resigning. REAGAN, ASKED 11 he had been approached by the White House about the possibility of being DOmin1led aa vice preei· dent, aaid, "Heaven's no. And I don't think they've talked to anvone else about it. I don't think It's even belng con· sidered." he II.Id. • Democratic Assembly Speaker Bob Morelli Hid th. Governor's charge1 were the acllon of a "franti c and dtirperatt man. 11 Post denied the aOCU11tlon1 hi had elU..r dlltorted hi• enaly1~ ot had wrtlten a partisan repor\. He 11ld hi would explain and dtfend hi• analyil1 at a hearing today before an AMembly com- mlllec but outalde of that huring : "I'm nol 1otn1 to debate the Gove1110r publicly." Post is the official with legal respon1lblllty lor writing tbe nonpartisan amlysis in voter Jllffiphlela of a 11 ballot Pf"Ol)Mitlons. llUT TIIE GOVERNOR told a news conference that Poet'• analysis or his initiative "Is neither an analysis, nor is it nonpartisan.'' Reagan's criticism was aim· ed. primarily at a section of P01t11 analysis in whi ch Post said pusaae of the initiaUve could Iorce cull of up to lllO milllori In lhe •late budpt next yeer. Posl aald that could force local aovemment.s to ralle property texea to mike up tome of the difference; The Governor said Poat, who agrees with a legal opin- ion ._ed by Lej<ialaltve Counsel Otori• Murphy, has mialnterpreted the lansuqe of the lnltlative . ASKED IF he obtained a le1ll opinion contndleUn~ Pool, R'8gan replied ha dldn t need one because, as author of the initiative, ht knew what WU Intended by II. "\Ye haven't even sought a legal opinion," Rell,a:an said. He accuaed Post o f deliberately abuJing hls non- partisan title to serve the political interests of Democratic leaders of the Le.gialature. But Senate Republican Cau· cus Chairman John Harmer of Glendale added : "Alan Post doesn't slant !lguru." % on 'dlpDSlll DI $100,000 tor six months to one year The number et these accounts that we can accept is lim it ed WE PAY COMPETITIVE INTEREST RATES ON ALL OTHER ACCOUNTS FOURTEEN OFFICES TO SERVE YOU IN Aru1U11 •terril•' La Cr111tnta •artn .. 1•11 Q1rd•n1 •tom MtM L" Antitt• 12) · •11" l•rMrdino •t1no11 Pllk DIWMV (2) Mtwtlfey Pft Whittler fiwe Addtti111I Otflc11 ta N1rt•1r1 C1lll111l1 PlllHlt Hill hi lr111 (Op11l11 S111) Fostar CIIy 111111111 Vlaw s111111 *OPEN NIGHT & DAY and Saturdays • Call (213) 923 -9801 •. s 0 , or '" the whlll peget · · for your nearest office &:. ASSETS OVER $375 MILLION '· It's at JCPenney. • 398 The terrific turtleneck. H1nd10mtly basic, of 100% acrylic. with long sleevet. In assorted colors, 11'1 the perfect b11i1 for the layered look. Soys· siJtl 8·M·L 3so The acrylic sleeveless ve&t 1h1t'110 1m1!1 in price. but adds so much to a fellow's wardrobe. This orfe it av1ileble in assorted colors and at this great price, why not collect sevefal for wardrobe ttrelching. Boys' 1iz11 S·M·L • 598 Boys' plnw1te corduroy pants. Easy.care polyester/cotton. Greet for school wear with those smashing deep cuffs. j1t11n 1tyllng. Great color1. Si211 8-18 reg. Slim sizes es wbove, sizes 8·18. 5.88. gsg Boys' popular moc toe casual bOot in 11n or brO'M't btuthed surface Ayaiteble in boys: siz11 10·3. As above. boys' sizes 3~1·6, 10.99. U11 your JCPtnntY cihtrgo eiird. JC Penney We know what you're looking for. Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the followinQ stores: HARBOR CENTER, Cos ta :.:esa (714) 646-5021. FASHION ISLAND, N1wport Beech (714) 1>44·2313 . HUNTIN GTON CENTER, Huntington Beech (714) 892-77771. • CJ u .-... •. t'ILO I Wtdnesday, August "19, l'r1 ... I. Fomll11 Clraq by Bil Keot1e ( "Mommy, c coterpurtle wonts to know if he con come into our house. Can he?" :ua~k Flares U11 Mills Ca1tcels Appeara~e From Wire Services A back ailment that may force Rep. \\'Ubur D. Mlll!, (0-Ark .) to retire from politics flared a g a i n and forced cancellation of an a~ pea ranee. An aide appeared on behalf of the chairman of the House \Vays and Me~ns Commit!ee and delivere<l the speech Mills intended to make to the North Little Rock (Ark.) Chamber of ·Commerce. Miss Meeuwsen, 24, was ad - mitted after complaining of chest pains, the spokesman said. She arrived in Hawaii from a USO tour of KQfea and Okinawa with six~state beauty queens from last year's fl.1iss America pageanl' . * Two weeks after an accident in which she-wac; se!'io1.!c;ly in- jured, Pamela Kelley, JS, re- mains paralyze-' fro:"\• th0 waist dowrr, · according ' to a ,,.---------. sook.e'nnan '2t I.be C31le Cod ( PEOPLE J. ·Hos.p!W, in,HyaMis,.Maso. The girl was injured Aug. ._ _______ _,,, 13, when a jeep-type auto driven. by Joseph P. Ken"erh· I 1II crashed on Nantucket.f Aide Gene Goss said Mills ''felt a twinge" while at his home in Kensett, Ark., and was experiencing some pain . J\·til\s has announced that if his back does not improve, he will not seek re-election. Tuesday, Mills entered a Little Rock medical center for tests. * Terry Anne ~teeawsea, reigning Miss America, has been hospitalized at Tri;r Jer A r m y Hospital in Honolulu with a respiratory in- fection , a h«spitc)I spokesinan said. / Gregory Acqui'.trod . Of 'Praying' WASHINGTON (UPI ) Comedian Dick Gregory and sevenr peace activists have been acquitted o! illegal e ntry and unlawfill a s s e m b I y charglol Io r praying al the Wblte House before the Cambodian bocnbing bait. SUPERIOR COURT Judge Charles Hailed said 1\tesday the White House was a public place and the assemblage stopped <lnly briefly to kneel and pray without obstructing tratric. "We were praying for peace and they arrested u s . ' ' Gregory said. "You bette!' believe it we had been pravin~ for Richard Nixon 's health thev wouldn't have tou ched us." FIVE UNIFORfl.tED \Vhitc 11ouse guards who made the arrest were present in the courtrocrn but were not called by the government's attorney, Donald Abrams. Halleck has been hearing 185 cases stemming from several arrests made at the \Vhite House of pacifists and antiwar demonstrators who s t age d pray-ins before the Aug. IS halt. Co••,11e lin9 Uc•n•• 21110 Island . Kennedv, 20, the sOfl. of the late Sen. Robert Kennedy. was ,· convicted of negli~e'lt driving aod his license revok- ed for SO days. · I ... *. · Gen. Omar Bradl~J, to. who was listed in serioua C{\llditi:in following emergencf sur~ery less than t\!O weeks ago, ls IJ1? and walking abd WautJ -to go home, UCLA Medical Center reported. Bradley, the nationts last livizfg_five star officer, is "~ing· excellently," a bospitaf spokesman said. ,But doctors want him to build up his strength before releasing him. · Movie actor* Roger Mqore hM be(.oome a fathet for the third ti.me., An aide said that a 7-om;nd 1-ounce boy was bQm to Moore's wife, Luisa. He said both mother and son were fllle in Loodoll.. ~1oore has a l~vear-old daughter, DeJ-orah, and a 7· year-old son, Geoffrey. * Three Italian m o v i e personalities are oul o f theatrical action -for the time being. Actress Anna Magnani, 65. is in a Rome clinic for a gallstone operation; director Vktorto De Sica, 71 . is recovering in Geneva from minor lung su rgery. and direc- tor Luchino Visconti, 66. entered a Turin rest home for a medical checkup. * Mayor IUchard .T. Dalev or Chica~o has gained h.is second granddausdlter in a rn.onth. Elliabeth Patterson Daley - eight pounds. four ounces - was OOm to Barbara Lynn Daley, wife of the mayor 's eldes t son, l\1icbael. Elizabeth is lh1' mavor's third granddaughter a nd eighth grandchild. * Prime Min ister Edward Heath mav visit Mosco w in the next few mon ths to cement fast improving An~lo-Soviet relatM'.>ns, govemrent sources said. CHA IN FENCE SAVE ON CHAIN LINI< FABRIC PROTECT FAM !L '. HOME AND PEiTS ol "10, ~ ""'Br.IC "II ~~N 50°,l'n \· Ir; ' ''"T,~".7n BY \'/Ar ns CllMM ,..,... ....,..,, ·~cl CUI 11111• ti tlUtCLy, lowm~mtff"r<• ,, .... ~,,~ w ,,_ 'tln'(k .. fM ltlmc. '#Ir~ !·""If: i" 't1 •11 "'"'" nltfd tw t''I• -•g,..._ ,..... ..,,.11, ""'• •ltd l•tc11lotfo11 Gf'I eatre llt 011r ret•'-lew ,nc.. Coll fot frw ftfi11rate today! WOOD AND WIOUGitfT llON AUO AVAILAIU.. 'Sacrilege' ' Eroti~ Film Halted PARIS (AP ) -Frencb of. !icials bave focbldden shooting of the erotic movie "The Leve Life or Jesus" on French ter- ritwy. A Danish company . was scheduled to start wort on the film next week in the town of Apt Jn southern France. The decision to ban the shooting wns announced Tuesday by Andre AstQU.x, general direc- tor of the French cinema authority. t'O~'TROVERSY had swirl- ed around the project or 6arusb di.rector Jens Joergcn Thorsen. Pope_ Paul Vl issued a sharp rebuke In a speech SUnday. A statement by the ~1ost Rev. Eugene Polge, archbishop ul Avignon, follo-1 the com· ment by Pope Paul ' "CHRISTIANS OF Avignon and the Vaucluse Department have proved their support for liberty oJ art and culture, and will refuse to condemn or ap- prove state productions or films which offend their faith and their attachment to the • Firm .Will Try [ . ' ·. Cyc'<:imate Agii'in .-.·;,.·;,...-'-~- NEW voai(('uPI) -Al> bott Lal>ora""'°'" tho 1"' ventors of '~tel lbnt were baMed ..... ;l'•IJ:ll .ll:O bccau~ "!11'.!'.~ Clouod . to co.use ~ In 1'Wlf>' bas con11rWtt,wlil'Uf topul'JM ortilk:l!\~ aweetener bod ·on th<: iniiritlt. . ,,, ~ A spoj<elman for tbe drug company ~ald TUesd&y new cxperimi!nls carried out . In several par_ts of· the world, 1n- cludlng a study by the Na· !Iona! CS*er lnatitute, in- dlcated tb,&t cyclamates are '8.f:e io, -~ and caused ·no ' , adve:rse eUects . even when given to rats in muslve does. Asked whether aaccharln might be baMed a n d cyclamates restored, FDA commissioner Alexander M. Scilm!dt said, "Ttwt would take a lot of e1plaining. 1 don't think we are going to do anylhing that we ean't explain and e1plain well." The Abbott spokesman, in a telephone interview at the Laboratories Ollcago head- guarters, said the company Was filing a petition with the FDA to lift the cyclamate ban. Make the eaSylife easier. start with 20%.savings at our big recliner' sale. , --- ' ' ' ' ' '• • ~ ';'.j ·;?. ,_~:;;..' ··:" ,..,.. :~'JI . . · .. •. ' ,; . Save 33.99 Sale '135.96. Reg. 169.95. Expand· O-Lo11nqt>r oovered in nylon w111i Scotchgard'I" l1n1sh has 1hree comlorta ble positions. Head- and loot-rest are self-storin g. • I Save 2499 Sale 99.96, Reg. 124.95. 3 pos111on hi-leg recliner has deep lulled. foam padded back, sell- stonng loot rest. Jn black expanded Boltaffex'• vinyl. Save 33 99 Sl!lle 1 69.95. Re'g . 135.96. Med11er- 1 aneiln style 1echner covered 1n rich 'ii yon velvet wllh Scotchga rd • l1n1sh. 3 reclining positions. opens inro 11111 size recjJner v11th sell· stori ng loo r-resr: Save 3399 S<ile 135.96, Reg. 169.95 Med11 er· 1.1ncan srylc recl!ner is cove red. in -easy-to-clean supporled grained viny l. 4 reclini ng positi ons. Sohd polyurethane foam seat and back '::. -:. •. Save 3399 Sale 135.95. Reg .• 169.96. Recli ner covered w11t1 He rculond olcl1n tweeo. Seat and back are polyure- lhane roam Opens into extra-large size recl1 n~r Save2599~ ' . Sale 103 .96. Reg, 129,95. 'English: P11h' 4·posi t1on re,linerf-.:lbrator is v111yl covered. The seat is padded with polyuretharie foam. " ' , .. • . • Saves20 Sale 69.95. Reg . 89.95. Spindle bun k beds with nlaple hn1sh. Ladder and guard 1alls are included. Bedding is not included. • • • • Save$24 9-fe 95.95:--Reg. 119.95. ~~a pie l1nished bunk beds w1!h bookcase storage space. Ladaer, guard rail Included. Bedding is not included. ~ ·. Sate 199.95, Rfitf~~9.95. Oub"Supe~ati"j·m&Uress se1 l;'tas a unrque twin lourJd,ation .th.al l~l,yOU'have a different.llrmn"s on,bolh sldei df the bed. TtJe ·.set is covefed 'With a·IO[!g w11A'ring rayon sa1een .• p(i':lt,.:.,Also ~a.~e,<OA !Win lull and king size. ·1· Sate prices effective thru s&turcf~y. f • ' •• , .. , :s1 gait·9& .~ .. ch ; A. Apartrfiint size conVerti!Me sofa. Contemporery styling:•56" long. Features ·• seat cush!on,s of 41!.i" thick D1cron• po lyester."Yrap polyurethane loam. Kiln dfi ed freme. B. Ear ly Amlrican convertible &ofe is apartmen1 size: 56" long. Featuru polyure1hane foam mattress. Dacron• polyester wrap polyurethane foem M at cushiOO•~ · " . 'U11 Penn1y1 Time P1ymtnt Pl1n. ~ .. r· .· JCPenney · I . I We know what you're looking for. • ' . -.. .. "' Shop Sunday noon to 5 P .rin. at the following stores:·:'·-.. . • " • FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach (714) 64+231). HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Beoch (714) 892-77771. • Gals Lose Low Ptw13 • F or:Dtinks ' WASHillG'!'(lN (AP) -A loca1 pub, 'fl)e Rogue and Jar, 'CUI the ' price of drlnkJ for · women ln1 hall for several hours on weekday evenings for a ye411 to help draw the alter-' "-Wk crowd. · But the llquor board has told ITljlll•gemellt the! a dlssi'un· tled patron I>' threatenlhj! to file an o(flclal c0mplali>t wltti the . federal ~v~ent to do away·wtth the p&'actice. • '.Rather than· fight, lb• pub' switched to. !'<luall~y for all : Female tipplers no\V have to pay. the same as the men . · . - Baueous Eans . , , , Th~usands of _young teen:agers, cameras in hand, crushed together recently fo r a live performance In Chicago of the Osmond Brothers. Ten y'oung fan s were injured when a restraining fence collapsed . A HEART FULL OF LOVE, and an eye fulf of beauty to bii'aure .. But a pqc~et full of ,money ien't necesnryl Our Magnificent 12- karat gold-filled cross wf!jl genuine jade is only;$.26.50. Do Some1hing Beautiful._ Clll1'941 Ace-II h1Ylt .. - Amtrlt .. ••IWft&, IHll.A!MriCM"• 111111 ~""' (Ila,..., IM. r~!L, Vli.CK~S J ew1;le1"S Since 1917 10 FASHION ISLAND Nt'Wi>Ort IMch 644 1JIO Wllh loclll'°"11 a+: Torr•l'K•• Or1ng.t, Al$o: S111 OltOO ..,_,, Us V~t. French Wine Scandal Probed PARIS (UPI) -The finance ministry has l ' ackqowledg¢ tJlat tax inspectors were look-i in& into report.t ot' a wine scandal involving ~· c~eap red wine sold under famous Bordeaux 1 labels. I But it said• the investigation was not directed againSt specific individuals and that it was too early to tell whether any charges _would be brought. · THE MINISTRY, apparently trying to play down the controversy, said 6,000 similar checks ":ere carried out in 1972' and their only · aim was to tnsure that drinkUS Were getting the proper quality wine. Tbe scandal erupted last weelr when PariS' newspapefs discJdsed revenue age!lts were in-1 vestigating the bottling of cheep wine labeled with prestigiolls Ind expensive names .. ' . J 'I ' THE NEWSPAPER Le Flg"IO said the scandal was attacking ''the reputatlOn of . French .wines abroad. It's a Ver)'. important point... . ' ' ' I , : ': .. The InterprofessionaI Council of Bordeaux winegrowers met over the weekend and ask- ed the ministry "that the Conclusions of the inquiry be published as quiCkly as Possible.'' Paris newspapers reprinted front page articles that appeared in the .I..ondoo press on the alleged wine fraud, emphasizing Uuit one-- third of the product\00· of BordeaUJ. wines is exported abroad, mainly to Britain. · PARIS NEWSPAPERS said 1.4 millioo ho~ ties of alleged phony Bordeaux were seiied at the warehouse of. one of the largest wine dealers in the Bordeaus:: area and named him. The newspapers . saJd the proprietor purchased the wine from a "Mr. X" who last spring told several" wine houses he could gwirantee to deliver them wine with the ~veted,"appellation cootrolee" label. · "Appellation controlee" on a Bordeaux label is sup~ to guarantee quality, and gUatantee that the wine meets rigid standards set by lhe French government as to its origin and' contents. REG. 6995 Carrying eM:e or cebinet •X\l'I " Start sewing. This easy-operating machine is so efficient, anp so <low prtced, there's nothlttg to stop you~nowl It sEiws straight and Zig· iag stitches ... sews buttoriholea, •bultons; even mends, without at- tachments. There's a ,hil'ig ed presser·foot for heavy fabrics, numbered-·seam guidelines,. J and lots of other conveniences. . . .. ... , . ~ch&~w·sewing machine · ~h cabinef S · , · · OFF REG. PRICE Deluxe sewing the uncompllcated Singer way. ' With 14 bullt~ln stitche~. Built-in speed bast ing. And a built-in buttonholer. And the exclusive .SWgm• push-button front drop-in bobbin. So many felitures tor thorouphly professional, de- lightfully easy sewing. And you get the superb desK/cablnet Included In.this sale! SINGER·,- Sewing Centers.and partlclP8U1Q" Appl'Off,d Dealers F : •• ;,,, • ' • .c.r~ Ir dc~l ·r n~.:tOI .' yoi.-, •J 111',~th• v•llqw P•9•• u.1d~ sr:w N . /,\/ c: !IN. s Slngorhu a liberal trade-in palicy. Aleo, a Crodl~Plin Is available at Singer Sewjng Cen1ers and many Approved Oeala~. , •A filrllmerkof THE SINGER COMP'ANY COPY';loh1>@1973 THE SINdEA CO~PANY J..11 Algh\s Rese rved Throug~ut lhe World. ·• Wtdntsday, Aug1nt iq, 1973 DAILY PILOT 9 Not F~t fo,-Dogs~ · ANIMAlogic14»" ""'"" Animal Lovers Study Flying Conditions -""""SAS CITY CAP) -A lot or cokf,'" wet noses are flying out of Kansas City Interna- tional Airport these days. planes' baggage holds and the Il_eqyirem~nts for the boxes, handling the dogs receive arc which are similar to orange the main points under in· crates, are that there be vestigation. The shipment of eno ugh room for the dogs to diseased animals also is being turn around, stand up or lie studied. down In a natura l position. "We saw one dog here with Shipping regulations call fo r an infected eye that was shredded pa~r and a almost swollen s h u t • • • waterproof liner in the bottom McMahon said. "The ins ured of the crates along with non- value was $150, but in that breakable food containers. · condition 1 wouldn't have paid The House committee will $5 for it." conduct hearings Sept. 25-27 to ~)) ) ?1 q,,.. .. , ....... ., •r ., ... .:;r- •' UJELL-W"O AM 11'0 ARGUE WITMYOU ?" Robert h1 e j d I , executive determine what legal controls field agent of the Ame rican should be placed on the shi?- "KANSAS CITY is very Kennel Club, said that shiir ~·;;n;;en;;t;;of=an;:i;:m;:a;:ls;:. ======;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,- definitely the hub of the na· pers often insure the dogs for I ~~k iu:~~ho~afJ~~~to:a~~ ~~~e~:a~i!1e: :~~i~~~;~ FAIR·MONT PRIVATE SCHOOL And animal lovers and con- gressmen are checking reports that ma.n's best friend is get· ting a raw deal. They are demanding tighter regulations to ensure the comfort and safety of the dogs which travel in boxes deep in a baggage compartment, at the mercy ot the men wbo pack the box and watch the compartment. investigations of the Humane shipper can then make money Society of the United Stales. from the insurance claim. 4~-, Don't keep your child in re:,, "In a single day, one shipper :'-ij,1\ ~ alone brought in 82 crates of DEAN KALIVAS, an aide to f1i<1, : ~! nursery School if he iS ~· puppies, usually with two dogs the House committee, said his .Iii .,. in each crate." investigation stems from com-~jf · d f k' d t · · plain1s at Washington National rea y Or In ergar en. McMahon said that in one Airport that some puppies I I recent shipment of animals, shipped from Kansas City's Full academic program ... Enro now. "We found a box with a coon hound in it that was com-airport were victims of heat K' d . h B h ~o\ prostration. m ergarten t ru t . _ .. ,.-.,':.i ... pletely nailed shut with no .,. ~~ .. ~ food. water or bedding in· "The real problem in dog d I 3 R' ( f . ,( 1'1"-"~ side." shipment is not at the T ra itiona s. a eterra . . . ·~ A House committee in-airports," Nejdl said , "but in T · E t d d d vestigattng gov~ent opera· the peripheral areas. It would ran sportatron . . . x en. e ay . tiom has been studying the air ta~e maybe $1 more .tor the ~ freight slfipment of puppies . shipper to r,mckage hi~ dogs 1557 W. Mable St., ~ Phone out of Kansas City. well , but we re laced w11h the Anahe1'm ;'ij,;;jl 774-1052 proble1n that some breeders . ....- THE CONDmON of the just don 't care .. , '---------------------' Strike now at .Penneys boWling ball sal~ and you'll have money .to spare . Sale 1~· ' r , Reg. 21.99. Personal "'300 .. Bowling Ball by Ebonite. Available in 10,'12,~14. end 16 lbs. comes In blue, bronze. burgundy or ,g~n plas'tic. Th is JC Penney exclusive is endorsect.by Dpn Carter ind is made to meet or exce~ .111 American Bowling Congress Specifications. " Sale 1~ Reg. 21 .99. Brunswic k "Triple 9r0Wn" bOWtfftg ball. Available in 10. 12. and '1 4 lbs.·Tri-colbr' balls in red, blue. pllrple or green plastic are a mixture ol three shadef of the same color, Bowli ng bags <'I nd sho-&s also available in com· pl elely co-ordinated ensembles. ~Sale 1599 ~ .. ,._., 19.99. P'erson al .. ~oo·· black r'ubberbow1ing balfby Ebonite. Available in 10. 12, 14, 15 and 16 lbs. Made to meet or exceed all American Bowling Congress specificatiOos. · •• ,. prlctt effective through Monrtay )Labor ~·vJCPenney .u .. yourJCPonnov cha~gooord. We know what you're looking lo~. Shop Sunday noon to 5 P .M. at the following stores: HUNTINGTON CENTER, ~un tington Beach (714) 892-77 71. FASHION ISLAND , Ni wport Beach (714) 644-2 31 3. l I ). • • I __J Cl U'°'li.. Y l'ILV I Wfdnr~iQ, August 29, 191 ... Tests P1~essed for ' WASH!NQToN (AP ) 01romoeome IJlllylls h a s been reconunended by the Conautner Product S a f e t y Cortu:n.\llion f 0 r Up!..'Ct&nt patenll who have used spray adhetl .. of tht t)'Pe binned by tho .,....,,, IHI week. .The rommlsslon &190 recom· mends t.hit those planning 11 chlld consider delaylzl.i plana until a doctor Is consulted. The recommendations came from a panel of specialists conv,ned by the commlnlon to track down the suMtance linked to two birth de!ormltles -WANTED-1 DIAMONJ)S • GEMSTONES Jewel• by 1•••1'h '1 1eerchl11t for di•mond1 anti ffll'ltfen•• fOfll pri¥•f• lntli.,.idual1 •nd •1t11!111. Cer•ful •••Min•tio11 an4 •"•l1t11flof1 by our ••P•rh. Hl1ht1t 1trlc•• p•14, Cell 540-•046 ID·• d•llv, 5et11~•Y I 0°6, S1,11ufey clo1ed, •I~ f•r Mr. D•nn11 Foli1 or Mr. Jos•ph. iewels by ioseph h11tfl CMlt Plaa e Jiii lrh,.I, Ccttte ..... e 140.9066 Try Satu.rtlay's Netvs Adhesive Users in Oklabo1n11 City a n d chromoeome damage In the parents and tour adult1. Tll E COM~IJ SSION banned four 1pr1y1 list week, ind a tp0ke1man aMounced • ban on nine more tY)>CI. He estimated the number of 1pr1y canJ clrcul1ting In hob- by and art supply 'tores at "millioo,.,." The 1pr1ys are used for 11callng packagea or attaching ptcees to graphic de1lgna. THE ADHESIVES bMned last week V.'ere Krylon Spra y Adhe6ive made by Borden Co. or Columbus. Oh.io, a n d Adheaive 77, Foll Art Spray Adhelive and Scotch Brand Spra-~1ent mado by Tho 3-M Co. of St . Paul, ~1inn. Among parents exposed to '.he 11pray11 "there Is certainl y a good chance or having a normal. healthy baby," said the comrr lsslon's . panel of speclalisll. "We already know that In many clrcumstances of thi1 type • nonn1l, healthy ~by has resulted." THE PANEL said there ap- pear11 to be no need fe& con· cern yet ovtt chlldren who have been exposed. But it recommended prec1ut1on1 for adults of child-bearing aae. particularly when both porents ha ve been exposed. 'Ille panel ""' headed by Dr. J. Rodman S..ly, the Unlvenlty of Oklahoma IKOlen- tlst who linked the opr•Y• to birth defonnltl ... The rl!OOm- mendatlona noted that damage could go unde~ted bec1use "'1 .._.... routine lftll"lal eHmlnotlons T•lc•• Poee do not Include ana.lysl1 or chrorno9omeJ, which carry Robert E. L. Eaton ol hereditary foctoro . Ma.ryland took office Even a chromosom e tbla week 11 national anal)'sla can mlaa the 1peciflc comm1nder of the dapiage linked to th• 1prays American Legion dur· unless lhe analy1t knows what Ing a convention ol the to look for, the panel said. leilon in HawaU. ~~--'~~~~~~~·•I We believe .in Music! 1 0 top stereo L. P. albums or 8-track tapes. All top artists. All at low, low Penney • prices. 3 ~a~Album Chicago VI. Columbia Records Dark Sida Of The Moon, Pink. Floyd. Harvest Record& Now and Then. The Carpenters, A & M Records A Passion Play, Je1hro Tull , Chrysalis Records Diamond Girl. Seals and Crofts. Warnet Bros. Record1 Fantasy. Carole King. Ode Records Foreigner. Cat Stevens. A & M Record& Farewell Andromeda . John Denver. RCA Rte0rd1 long Harri Climb. Helen Reddy, Cap11ol Records j cir srEvi~is- , FORE IG NER I -·. .. '• Long Hard Climb .!. HELEN REDDY • ... ,I>\¥ .... _,,.....,. f Wt'ro An Amorfcon B1ncl. Grind Fun~ C'.potol Rec:rd1. JC Penney We know what you're looking for. ncn John.Denver F•,....UAll4rd .... 1unn11 Wfflh&-11u .... Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following stores: FASHION ISLAND, Newpo rt Beech 1714) 644-2313 . HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Beach (714) 892-7771. L.ItJ. BOJd Many. Haven't " Eaten Lobster Noi 111111)' II any pt~ have bttn mare rtvertd ••by lllllvtrtlty mlndt lhap Bir Jam111'r1Hr, author of "'Illa Golden· Boulh." It wu ho, bear In mind, who llld, "Tiit . awa and dread with which the unlutortd nvaae contem· plala 1111 molhe:-In-law are amona1t the mo1t familiar Jtact.1 ol anlhropoklcy." U your name coatalnl the letten c, 1, J or o, you can be txpteted to pen your llln&ttll't f11t- 1r U\ln IVll'lll• U your DID'll COD- talnJ k, q, w or m, you probably 1lgn more tlowly. Th., are lbe lettert In the EnfUlb alphabtt nld to take tho lea1t.and the m01t Ume to write. Today'1 poUct odYlce: U t0mebody on the telephone tell• you your cer- maker wants to pick up your auto to fll tome defect you didn't know It had, bettor call tba law. Oddi are the caller Is a car thief. Another fiat fact 11 mothera between II ond 19 year1 old bear 4' parcant of the blblt1 born out of wedlock. ACl'ORS Q, "Do any Amerlcan actora ever make movl11 In the Sovie t Union?" A. Some. Peter Falk wu the first to do 10. Ten ye1t1 ago Q. "What are the lhree most common company sports? In order?" A. Bowling, softball and golf. Q. "What are the chances my legs are the same length?" A. About 50-50. At least hair the people have one leg mea3W'ably shorter than the other. llave you ever eaten lobJter7 When the pollsters put that query to clUzena natloowide, 4.1 percent of the men said no, 47 percent of the women likewise no. LOVE AND WAR Masculine client reports he's running out of compU· ments to pay his girlfriend. Says she's getting dis.interested. Requests our Love and War man '• advice. Be Jmqinatlve, suuests he. Intimate that_ she might have bet!\ a great at- torney if she weren't such an enchanUna sex symbol. That ought to intrigue the young lady. One big difference between a domesticated animal and a wild animal baa to do with beg&ffig. A pet leama ~w to whlnt, whimper, be& for food. No wild ~I does that, I'm told. The 1cience boys don't explain v.·hy they reeard this as highly llgnlllcanl Many Is the Seasoned CIUun who recalls that Italy invaded Ethiopia in the lt30I. But not many remember that the battle hymn ol the Ethiopian army then v.·as "The St. Loul!I Blues." Addreu mall to L. M. Bo~d, P.O. Bo• l 876, N1too port Beach, Calif. 926f!-O. ., DRU~ STORES WORLD'S FLAIR ! OATEBOOK ,OFFER Big 71).WEEK DATEBOOK/CALENDAR for 73-74 ... load• of llluatrattons you oan oolor with FLAIR . Only S1.00 with coupon. FLAIR -Reg. 49 ,. SPE9":\L . :;." ~~ 0 Business ' OfMruic Tough .,' DEAR JOYCE: 1'111 ln- tert1ted In bocornlni a record producer. I'm 1tudylne m~lc In college now bul I'd Ukl lo know JC there'• aome achool or book on haw to become a record produC<lr and what Ire the cbance1 of ge t tl n g establ11hed? -C . E .. V " Chlcaao No, BChools and booka are 11 rare &!I 1 78 rpm recD'd. But l did locate the derlnltlve t e x t -"'Mlis Business ot fliusic" -plus a bonus: the book'a edHor, Paul Ackennan, told me the score. Ackern1a11 Is music editor e1neritus of Billboard, a leading t r a d e publication reporting on the $2-bllllc;n.a¥ year music rtrordlng iJl. dust ry. RECORD PRODUC£118 find reco.rdlni artl1t1, fe rret out good mu1Jcal material ·ind supervise recording sessions. While the composer a n d (Career Corner J recording artl1t are cardiriaL it is often the producer who ii responsible for tho making oJ a hit. Both at lhe recordina: sessions and at the com· plicated studio 'ed!Une .essiona \\'hi ch follow, the producer supervlaes ill operallons and guide! the crtauon of the overall proc:hact · Al1hou1h 1 te c hni ca l knowledge ol muaic i1 helpful, it iJ not essential as Jong a& the producer contributes Qther key ~Jenl.5 to the job. For in· stance, many 1ucceu!ul pr<>- ducers h.1vo leader1hlp ability, or a slxth sense 1n predicting n1arketable music. Some record prQducera work for lurge e1tabll.ahed manufac· turera, wh ile oc.hors funcUon as independent rtcOtd pro- ducera. Many independent pop 1nu1ic produtt!rs &o i n t o buaineu for lbemlelve1 at an early age 011 the theory that pop mualc i1 belt done by youth. So. once you know your way around the reel, figuradvely speaking, it's a matter o( find- ina: fui.ancina' to iO in to business. lndependenli usu1lly don't handle the complex dlstrlbullon W HU t h e "mas ter 1" (grlclnal re- cotdlnp) to a fllJtr flnn. Some independents wort on a.WifU11ents front I a r a e manufacturers. Ad Ideal way ta train for this 'Wort is to r et a Job u • producUoa assistant or other aide to an in- depen dent record producer. You 'll wear more hats and probably learn more quickly in a 1 m a J I e r tstablll!hment. However, you may h!ve few optlona 11 competition lo enter this pol•nllally high-paying field 11 enortmu1. ACKERMAN BELIEVES th1t 1 direct 1pproach by let· ter or phone, alktng for an a~ polntmenl. I• the bet! method ol entry if you haVt no friends or contactl Jn the business. He !ugge1t1 you state tha t you hope to become a record pro. d~. giving evidence Qf your knowledge ot music. I! pop is your pick. for 'xample , you mu1t know a great deal about contemporary music _ such as being able to dlacusi a laf11'.e number ol hltl Of the )>Ill 4 or 5 years. Take any rea10na ble ofter, no matter how lowly, to get experience. ~fast music recordlnr Jobs are In Los Angelea, New York N1tbvllle, Memphis and Mu,,'.. cle Shoals. Ala., but exilt to son1e extent in other citiet as well, su~h as Detroit, Dlllas and Chic1go. Job leada of manufacturers. independents and distributors can be found 1n the Billboard Buyers' Gulde which comes out each fall Being a fecord proc:tu~ is like aolng to Lai Vegas· yoo hit the Jackpot u you make the btll .. 111n, charts b u t everybody c1n't be 1 'wlMer You're lucky to ge t S125-lSO ~ wl<!k " beginner. The Oelds d. country·and-westem and Ol1sslc1l mualc have inort Job 1tablllty than pop music. "Thia Bualneu of Music" Is pubU1htd by Biiiboard Books lt!O P•llerton St., Cincinnati' Ohio 111114: fl!. Al:!o be ,; avid readtr of the' trade papers such as Billbolrd, Cub Box and Record World. ' ,f • I 9 PILOT-ADVERTISER Wtdn!Sday, August 29, 1973 Wednesday, August 29, 197) DAILY PILOT JI ' .. ' ~ ~ GAUON LIMI or PINI '-s-weet~Heart FABRIC sornNER 1oxoF110 Q-Tips ---COTIONSWABS GIANTSIZI Reynolds WRAP ALUMINUM FOIL 211 SQUUE FEET REYNOLDS Arfillm Place To Shop! 10x20" Double HIBACHI Forks or Spoons Complete with BBQ toolsand fitted cover. · SET All-purpose white plastic 2: 1 00 cutlery. 11 PAKDF1DO S a JUMBO Straws White or Spice Tone Co!o1s! PA! ·11C OFll t 2:1 .00 Brown-In-Bag 7.88 HANDl-KUP Red and 29 wh ite .. striped plastic C \\lliifl' ... 8 size. PAK Of 20D KRAFT Ice Cream ~ ' -·-~OZ.SIZE Edge i I PROTECTIVE SHAVE .. ,.,.. &&c ll11tl1I Li•• EACN MITCHUM AHTl·PEISPIRAHT SPIAY POWDER ~~:~; 1 69 311. I IL MIRRO-MATIC COLOlMODE . Party Perk Brews llJ.11 cups ol 9 98 coffee to tllvor p.,k, Decorator colo~. 1 MISS ALBERTO V05 Wbi"d Cn•• Rine l C1diti111r It's uniq1Je! A1ich toam with 99c a lrtsh herbal scent Rtgullr 015uper. "'· ... fi~·--· -C~ar Eyes iii t y E Removes if! 11 '" 111 redness as it ·" Washasaway dus~ smoke ..., sootlles. '!; '1 d~rt29 'ii 1·:09 ;' ' SAMSONITE ' Card .Table & Chair "Amy's Garden" Sunshiny Yt llow or Orange! Ifs 1 decorating 11per· ience . . • a lerge 30" 7 99 tlblt with a conteml)Ora<y "Sticatto" top. !Mable CHAIR • baked enamel finisll and easy to open and c~so 9 99 1011. Matching chair bolsl! a padded seat and TABLE · ' - conto"ed baek. -· · I · - .... .. ...... . " .... TOPPINGS TOASTED COCONUT Marshmallows Solt. delicious tieat to 66 tempt your taste buds. C II IZ. Regular size see-thru. bags for oven cooking. AUADIN Lunch Kits Flit or dome styles with 1 !> pint thermos bottle d!llicting STUDENT BARGAIN PACKoF 8 BALL PENS REG. 99c 77' SHEAFFU PENS Wi" Speoi1I Dlfor oa the "Wtrll Atln" IJ IAND McN1lly Cartridge types. C Theme Book . · $TUUT HALL -J. Hole, college rulled, Sile. C 8xlOW' 49 S.llPointor 73 Great Offer! ea. lamous · 2 49 characters. EACH • ' GILLETTE Tracll CARTRIDGE SHAVING SYSTEM With 5 Twin Blade Shavinc Cartridges. 1.89 "Adorn" SHAMPOO Lemon, Balsam 77 and New Herbal. C 14 n. "T .,, ADYANCE LOOX en1 fP' ' . .. [);."" ' '?' .• ' "'' HOME Pll MANENT Genlle, ~gular or Super. II, 1.39 15 loch 1.98 by PmR'S Attractive prints or Solid colors in soft sided vinyl with zip tops, plywood bottoms and sturdy handles. locks and keys plus easy nesting for storage. 16 Ind 17 Incl 2.68 3.48 Delicious Chocolate, Pineapple and Vanilla or Ch-Ocolate Caramel. 12 DZ. 3i1 .00 CALIFORNIA 3-Holo Filler Paper PAK OF 5 Sterling Silver & Rosewood PIERCED '(I'\ Earrings ~ · : r & Rings -. , .. f'A. A·new, exciting look ~· ·~ in jewelry! ~odern, ." ~· contemporarydesigns • · ·• for the Fill Season ' :. score on all fashion· · ~ . points. .• . ' ·-· YOUR 1 77 CHOICE • ta. light up 1our 99c· eyes! ... Big Eye Shadows Creamy eye· catching colors! .~. 99c 5 oz. JAR Head & Shoulders SHlMPQO 1.29 4 LB. BAG Little Friskies CAT FOOD ~~=~ .. 1.09 10 LB., 11 OZ. FAMILY SIZE Cheer DETERGENT COOL-RAY POLAROID SUNGLASSES 20% The fashionable glare O kille rs with shatlec- resistant lenses. IWKEl HICES FOSTER GRANT OFF ~ 11 Auto~Flip"suNGl.AsHs "'V.J Polanzed lenses des igned 6 00 especially for · motorists. • LADIES' Handbags Popular shoulder and top 3 88 handle styles in fashion- able suede for Fall! ea. • ~~~-·""'-°"""""'_..~.s ! ' ' ~~·- • "One-A-Day" I MULTIPLE VITAMINS " for Better Health! ' 111'1" 1 99 ~!~ 2 29 111,·1 • tll's • ' I --1 I ' . . " ~ ~~~i.-!Al~$:WC- LADIES' TOPS ' Acrylic, Polyester or Nylon tops in popular sleeveless tlnk tops . or short sleeve styles ~ with novelty detailing. , 10' · • Sizes S-M·l· ;• 3.47 ... ! GIR LS' IOO% Colton in pretty print patterns. l lastic1zed legs. Sil!S 1-11. LADIES' Panties White [1derlon or Acetate with elastr-·3 r 117 c:ued legs. o Sim 5-tl 1 • • • I • • I . J2 OA!l'Y PILOT W~nesday, August 29, 1973 • .. ' • I : ·.Ge-back to sc·hool looking-and o feeling tip.-tep with · s~~ings from Treasury. " • ' ' :1 11:11~' •'' I\\' i!'), Scope c; ........ Right Guard ' Just Colg·ate '"'"..... Wonderful Toothpaste .~?£~ Hair Spray g Mouthwash · Deodorant 18 FL. oz. NT. wr . 13 oz . 79c Vitalis II Hair -~ ,, , .. Tonic Vitalis0 7FL.OZ. \\ ............ ' 7 3 C ~· · .. """~~~0o",\.,~' .· ''·--~. C .. M .. ~.;u .• j Clairol 129 Stri-Dex Medicated Pads ·~~ 75 's ·~ i -~L i .. Creme ~~!.~.co_•?.~.··~~ J Hair Color • Mylanta ' Liquid ·-~ 12 FL. OZ. J 19 .... --...... ':;... ... _. lh~ .• Toni ·Home Permanent J29 NT. WT.·7 OZ: ;~' NT. WT .13 OZ . 66 c 'ij!! 39c .. Neet Spray N.T. WT. 3Y2 OZ. ·· 139 . Wilkinson . Bonded · Blades 10 's Cover Girl~ · L;quid Make-Up ·~ ,., 109 Head & Treasury Treasury Daily .............. Treasury Shoulders Vitamin E ~ .. ~ Multiple B,uffered Shampoo :::f...U-~Capsules .. ~ . Vitam.ins· .. ~ ..• "' As·pirin buffered aspirin 4 OZ. TUBE 89c OPEN DAILY 9:30 to 9:30 SUNDAY 1 O: 00 to 1 O : 00 100 l.U., 100's Wll'H IRON· 250's . . . 239 ' ·199 --• 221IllUI111111 . ---225's 109 W• r111r.,1 the ri9ht to llmlt q1u1nHti11. Speclel ptlc11 good thru Mon~1y,.. S1pt1mbtir l , lt7l ' . OUNADA Hllllt 19000 Chetawoftft St. • WOODLAND HA.LI! '21500 Vlctorv l l'ld •• lMlSIDlt 3$20 Tyler SI: •UNTA ANAi 3900 So\lth 8rJstol St. eJOIMNClt $tpu!VH9 aM H~wthorne • UKIWOQlh Cerson Sf. Ind Paretn;ount Blvd~e IUINA P.AIKs B..a •!'Cl Orengethorp@ • OU.NOit Gtrden Grove Blvd. •nd M11'1chtsttr ... • . . ' . ' ' ' ·~ , • I • DAILY PILOT 13 l\.risl1na Cult Growing Ac1'oss Nation~---------__, l\'ew Tru1tee Melvin L. Doelz of Coro· na del Mar has been named to the 33-mem· ber Board of Trustees of Loyola llarymount University of Los Ange· les. Doelz is president and founder of 1i1ar- shatit Communicati ons. Mesa-built Rockets End Space Series The nine-year series of Athena n1is.c;ile launches from Utah to the \Vhite Sands Missile Range has ended with· the mst firing of the Costa l\fesa-bullt rocket. Army orficials said the Alhena launches, used to simulate re-entry of space vehicles into the earlh's at- mosphere. now will move to W&ke Is"iand in the Pacifi c. Last Fr.iday's launch ,.,f tionship with their neighbors, mostly Italian, In Brooklyn's working class Cobble HUI neighborhood . NJ;\W YORK (UPI) -The • "l'osan Krishoa. who changed Brooklyn temple of the Hare hi• name from Thomas Allin Kri1bna ls alive with the odor when he became a memllCr, or 1ire.,..e anii-ttie murmur 6f said the desire to expand-th trance-like modltatlon to tho Sunday program is one reason ff;lndu g'J<'. Krishna ._ the sect wants a new buildlng "TlfEY 'RE JUST not cos· Krishna worshipers, mostly in fl.~anhattan. mopolitan," Tosan Krislu111 under 30, are becoming a The Hare Krishna . have said ot the neighbors. familiar part or the Amerlc\ln tlf!Olher reason for wantmg to The sect seems to be well Urban street scene. They move -an unhappy rela~ ,.oU. Jt runs a profitable in· dance, ·chant, clap and rlng bells to the throbbing rhythm of drums their robes Oowlna, shaved heads shining In the sun and makeup 11treaked across their foreheads . THE SECT spread quickly across the country nfter it was introduced into the country from India in 1966. It has outgrown its temple and living quarters i n Brooklyn, one of 45 in the United States, and is seeking a new building in midtown Mnnhaltan. l\1embers -they c a 11 themselves devotees -and visitors remove their shoes in , the ten1ple to keep the floors clean, They often bow with fottheada touching the floor, ARTWORK ADORNS the temple walls. "It's amazing the talent th at Krisllla gives these artists," a ferrlale devotee said during a recent tour. She pointed to a painting of ri ve wild horses , each a dif- ferent color , pulling a carriage wlth two passengers. 'Ibe horses represent the fi ve senses with the mlnd at the reins and the soul In the back seat "being taken for a ride." ON SUNDAYS, visitors to the tcn1ple are treated to vegetarian cooking, and in- troduced to lhe religion. at goi cense (actory in California. Its centers sell incense, SWltan lo- tion (organic tangerine or strawberr-y ), religious books and a vegetarian cookbook. It: 11 ·~~ operates & printing plant in Brooklyn. "We focus everything on service to God," said Tosan Krishna. A mouthwatering mini-dinner that's a giant on value, especially now in times of high food costs. A whole char· broiled chicken thigh & leg In a tangy teriyaki sauce. Served with our specially prepared fried rice and a bed of lettuce. If you're . looking for a delicious. nutntious, lnexpenalve meal, then you'd a three · stage' Athena Ii ...----------.,! missile rrom Green River, Utah. was the final firing to White Sands ln a Pfoaram that Why do we make a slatement like that? The Storekeeper realizes that back to ~ch ool shopping can be a dilficult time for both mother and son. lf your son is like most boys. he grev1 this summer and as a result you may not be sure of his size. At The Storekeeper we have the people, or storekeepers, if you will , who will take the time to properly flt you r boy. We will take into consideration how the garflient will wash and if it's going to ·shrink and personally assist him from fit to fini sh. We also realize your son may be hesitant with back to school .purchases. He wants to wear what his friends are wearing the first day of school. He doesn't wan't to be out of step! We have helped eliminate lhis by stocking our boys department with merchandise that has proven to be accepted by the boys in the Newport Harbor area. Levi Jean s and Cords (some cords are now a polyester/cotton blend for easier care). Hang Ten Stripe Shi rts. Hawai ian Reverse Shirts, Cotton Flannel Shirts. also shirts in classic plaids and checks, and those famous Pacific Trail Jackets. a\1 will enable your son to dress with confidence and in good taste . Add to an this Storekeepers who· are kno\ivledgeab!e. courteous, and cap· able of being purchase a9visors. We can honestly say. "If you buy y9ur clothes at the Storekeeper. going bac k to school won't seem so bad . Try us. you'll agree. bette r try a Chick· Teri Snack. lt"s distinctive Japanese lood-a teriyaki flavored chicken leg and thigh along with fried rice.and a bed of lettuce, an for only 97•. And at today's costs, Chick· Teri 's the only place yoU'll llnd with 7 great food and at 11 price "°'• that won't keep you from o_, COSTA ...... . began in early "J.Mt. · A range spokesman said data obtained' liom, the p~ ~~. ~~v~~1:15~r~l ~~ the National Aeronautics and S p a c e Admlnbtralion to furffier the naU~11 space ex:· 'Vltraman.' Gets Hit NAKANOJO, J a p a n I A Pl -Saburo Shinoda, 24, known as the invincible "Uttraman Taro'' to fans A 1tore of e1traordln1ry character for men 6 boys. ' IANKAMl:fltCAllO enjoying It. So light inflation 1nd gjve yourself a treat, get a Chiek·Teri Snack-il's real cheep! MESA w!lh tills coup0n YoU 1rt entitled ~ •m ~ I ·-·-, .. ~~·o>>L-="'::"-;-'~=•T'--I FREE 1 COKE JAPANESE FAST FOOD I with every purch1118 ot 11 Chick-Ted Snack. It's so cheep-lt'a FREI! I I I I ploration. efforts.• , The prime contractor rqr both the standard Athena and the Athena H missiles used in the ~ram in ,Cclesco Corp., 3333 ilarbor Blvd . • of bis chHdren 's televlsion Show, was hospitalized after a bus smashed into a wall while carrying him to a filming site. 310 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa i .__•"_•_n•-64-2-·0-900--------.....llC~~;;N~~~;~~~;~N, MAITlll CHAAGE " 1028 trv1ne, Newport Beech, C•llfo~nia 92660, Phone 642· 7061 I ( TREASURY LATEX WALL PAINT 3.99 GAL,. REG. 5.49 Easy to apply, dries to a smooth matte finish In 20 minute&. Completely washablt. Easy cleanup with wattr. Sala price• elf1ctlv1 throu9h L1bor Day GLIDDEN LATEX WALL PAINT 5.99 GAL. REG. 7.49 Dries In 20 n)lnutts to 1 matte .. tlat finish. Completely jcrubbablt, ,..s;sts dirt. Choice of 3000 colors. Warm weter cleanup. IEml TREASURY LATEX HOUSE PAINT 4.99 GAL. REG. 6.49 Dries in 30 minutes. Weather and wear resistant. easy to apply on siding, shingles, masonry, stucco. Warm water cleanup. GLIDDEN SPRED• HOUSE PAINT 6.99 GAL REG. 8.99 long lastlng velvet llnish dries clean in 30 minutes. Bllster and mildew resistant. Clean up with w1rm water. 2000 colors. OIANOI City Dr. 1t G1r6tn Grove llvd. .,,.. to.t , ..... Delly ...... .,. 10 .. ' IUINA 'AtlK Beach 11 Oral'lge!tiorpe o,en llelty f 1H .. f:30 p.m. Sun4oy 10 r. 1 SAl'fTA ANA 3900 S. 8rlatol • No. of So. Coast Pl1ta 0,.. '°"' , ..... Delly. s ..... ,. to .. ' • '"' I I J.f DAILY PILOT For the Record Dlssol11tlons Of Marriage FINAi.. Ol!Clt•S:S Ellltted AlllVtl IJ C~1>!1>11, (M"bl Arlft &l'ICI A:Ol•l'ld ·~· Gr•~,....Jn, Jllhn lftnrv tnd P•vl• Ann 8rown, CArole Lorrtlne •l'ld u~ w. Ml!Yfr~. 0(1rOlhV Elolw ~ Jll)l)ef'I Wlls"" Le-9. Jean t. tnd Chart" O. Orosco, Emllla F.,l'Mlnct• .end A:lch.lrd Farrar. Melvltl L. Ind c.om1,n J . Jac~Mm· Ernn tftlt tnd Wltll•m R. tlarC1ln<1, Tom Lor..i Ind Jan!t C.erol ~tlvt•t, James L • .,I(! MtrUvn J. Oawr.on, NOl'fl'WI Lo!AM end O.nnl' ~way""' Bowden, LoY1lllO Jeon eP!d John A. Furlonci, Erika Marthe tnd Otlmont Ralph M~, Oan111d SleWllrdlw1 and Ol.i1N '~ PO!ltlcelll, Katnrvn aM T~o:>re P. L!nd~•V• Lynn •l'KI AO<lrt-w ""5" Wr!qht, Patricia Ann and Oennti Rat>erl Mturo, (Arol A. illl'ld Rlt:nard A. earnes, Wl!tlam l-lenrv •nd earbarl Joanne E•rl, MarQarel Ann el'KI Le<>nard TtlOmoi~. ShAron Lee and RolMrl J"'ome J;sc:lu.oll, ChArlt~ H. •nd Katnlelll'I P. HC11r1l!er. or.lore• and H1rrv En<1l1$.h. 5.1ndr1 Lee and J•me$ TlmathV Wrlqhl, Vicki L. ar><i AU~ L. Llndhart, CIM'rvl Jo end Ronlld Walte• Rivera. cutberta Jr. •nd l!liLaoelh sue Jl)f"dan, AIY!n I!. al'ld N1ncv L. /\dam~, ThOl'nl$ Fr•nds Jr. and Mari- lvo Rl1;1 McOon1110, svianne M. and Jonn C. Thompoon, Jayce Allee ill'KI Di le J~rnes f'lncoc~. Andrew Harold •l'ld S.ndra "~ McC1oe. Cvnrhla S. and eernard J. Wlltls, Kenneth Oale <1nd P,,1r1c11 J""" Mar&h, eewrlv Ann il'KI M1kolm Lll<'ll•rd Schlund, Maro11ret Ann end Bernard J . Mvnson, Judy M, •nd John L. Bumvardner, Waneta l.elnh and J. O. 81akelev, Rabl!rt A. ano Ethel 0 . Enter" A1111ist 16 Monlllo. Mercedes ef'ld R•mOll 1. Maver. Hel'berl J!!lln 1nd K&ltlNYI Je1r /Aelllni. J011n T.M. •nd LOllls M. Jr. Hern•nclet, Dian• and Gu.Oalupt Rocha (.01<., Etf'Qene 1nd R.udl Jos!M>h VIII. St•nleY J. and Jane A. Alt'r\Arar. Jean A.rln arid Jorvit Eduardo Rol!!Nan. 81rt.r1 J-and EClwln Earl WlnThroo, 1Ca1t1.nn. Mll,le 11\d H•r•Y Brennan Kfnt, Patrklt Ann •nd G•lt Ne(!(lfl Martin, Bobby O. anrl Anna V. Hoqelalld. Nani::v Etten anCI Ronald Dale Vincent, Bell• '1Jnd Ronald Jami's Hodoson IUchArd J. end Lorna J. McNaltv, Rlchtrd Vincent end Joan Lue!l/I Lewis, John Belton and C.1rol Jean Rosas, M~•Y Vlctcrl• •nd Ch.llr1es A. Oe Ma~sla, K<,lhrvn I. llllCI RODt!'t (.acano R'>Wl"v, Th•a W. and TModorti W. Hl11hl11nd, 51...,en OOUlll;is al'ICI S1a an w~fku,;;.~ Ge1nlrie Cit0I 1111C1 JM:k Wolrren Andrlc11!n, Lind• sue and Ju;in Jou san.z, Arlena and Manual R.._,.e; Maao. Skirlev M. anCI 'IJ«tll-t.. L1vanee, Richard Law~ce and Btverlv Jun Allen. Harlow o. and N1ncy M. coooer, Deen F. enCI Berla M. Bliek, JoseGh C. •nd l<•v Carol McCGV. K•nnelh Wayne •nd Donna LH "'••"'""'""::n .... ,..,. Otlier Deaths NEW YORK (APl -Robert W. Dowling, 77, a businessntan active in civic and cultural af- fairs arld a former national president of the Urban League, died Tuesday after a long ill· ness. OROVILLE !APl A funeral \Vas held Tuesday for Dan L. Beebe, longtime editor and publisher of the Oroville l\lercury Register. Beebe; 86. died Saturday 10 days after suffering a heart attack. Deatl• Notices . Firm Tells County Progress Evacuation Said Prope1·: SANTA !,NA -Counlf of· ficials concerned with atr p0Uution and disaster told the board of supervisors Tuesday that actions-Of Nt~rt Beach and liuntington Beach officials In evacuation of the beaches Aug. 19 when a gas cloud threatened to spread over the area were proper_ lor of emergency services, said the instance was similar to those in Donora, Pa .. and I nndon whi k man llvea. He ag...00 that e beach cvscuatlon was PT· ~ Jll.:l~CK BROBACK Of tllt Dilly l"ilol Sl1ll SANTA ANA -Orwige County received good news and bad news fron1 Computer Sciences Corµoratlon Tuesday. The good news was that the lirn1 had selected Univac equipment rather than lBti.1 at a saving to the county ol $502,185 On the $26.6 million, seven-year contract. The bad news was that the firm was unable to gel a $5 nli llion performance bond as Included in the contract. The finn offered to allow the county to with.hold to percen t or the payments for the first two years to provide ad· ditional safeguards. It \\'as estimated that the surn would be about $400.000 a year. After discussion. the county Board of Supervisors voted 4-1 to allow the security bond lO be reduced to $1 million. ::iupervisor R o n a I d \V. Caspers of Newport Beach voted against the change. He had moved that Ule contract be cancelled and ne\v bids be sought but did not get a sec- ond. Marcia Bents of Newport Beach, chairman of t h e Orange County Grand Jury argued that the contract should not be let to a company that was not fully bondablc. "Its• (Inly reasonable that this protection ($5 million bond) be provided," she said. She said the alternative of wlthboldin8 payments does not provide the proper protection. Mrs. Janice Boer of Santa Ana, a member of the Data Services Committee or the State Republican Cent r a I Committee urged that the con- tract go out to bid again. Supervisor Ralph Clark of Anaheim opined that the coun· ty should require that the hardware purchased under the contract be retained by the county as security. This \'.'as not included in the final agree· n1enl. Norman Re am. a San Cle1nente resident. urged the county not lo reduce the re- quired $5 million bond . Supervisor Ralph Diedrich of Fullerton, 'vho speHrheaded the farnting out of th e coun- ty's data service operations to an outside firn1. n1ovecl for the reduction of the bond lo Sl 1nillion. The (;rand Jury also offer ed a letter from George H. ~·Iurphy, legislative counsel Former Cotinty Personnel Chief Finds Controversy Former Orange C o u n I y Personnel Director \Villian1 C. Hart. who left Orange County for the quieter pastures or Sonoma County, has run into controversy there. "Patronage" and "wrong- doin g" were alleged by Ran- dall Prevo, general ntanager of the ca1ifornia P u b I i c Employes Federation. Prevo was a candidate for the personnel director's post which Harl received. He claims the entire procedure used by county officials was prejudiced and designed to hjre Harl. Prevo argued before\ the 5ono1na County Civil Serv ice Comn1ission \\·hich I u r n e d dO\l.'n his request for an in- vestigation. Prevo claimed lhe oral board that intervic,ved ap- p!icants \Vas biased. Two of the three were county ad- ministrators and there was no balance of opinion . he clai n1ed. The current personnel direc- tor. James ~1cGuire, denied each of Prcvo's allegations stating that the procedure \v as fair to >a I I people \Vho pa rtiripated. Costa M esa1i Se1itencecl for the state, Ulat the cowlty could not have a privat e firm tabulate the election ballots. • county Coun sel A d r I a n Kuyper does not concur In this opinion . UC Irvine Begiris Extended Program " Air Pollutjon Control Offlctr RJ:lpe Trial' Set ORANGE COUNTY Public school teachers and ad1ninistrators have an op- portunity for continuing part- time education in publJ c school administration bcp:in- ning: this fall under a new Ex- tended Uni versity program at UC Irvine. according to Dean Lyman Porter of the Graduate School of Admi nistration. William Fitch en , who SANTA ANA -,\.ii El Toro previously reported that the Marine accused of, multiple Los Angeles Air Pollution con-counts of rape and stf. trol District was taking no ac--perversion following his all~_: The planned program of lion on Ule leak at the Stauffer ed attacks on three fema les m stud y is expect_cd to take lhree ;;:::==-=========., Chemical plant in Carson, said the Costa ti1esa area has ~1 academic years and two sum--the district tater cited the fim1 ordered to face trial Sept. 5· ~ers to ~mplete on a part-Done by Dunn for three violalions. Orange County Superior Co , tu:ne basis .. C.1ass SC:hedu\es Pat Dunn gets things done. supervisor Ronald Caspe rs Judge James Turner set t e \VIII be adjusted du ring th e Thro\Y her your challenge or Newport Beach, who asked trial date for Larry RI)' regular school yea~ to ac-nnd see how she handles It in for a rePort from Fitchen. em· Duran, .23. who ls held in co'!f~ commodate the special needs her "At Your Service" col-phasized that he did not think ty jail with bail se~ at $1.~ of part-tin'e students. Ex· umn , now appearing every that the Newport Beuch police pending trial. He faces nirte Applications currently arc being accepted for the prcr gram leading to a master of science degree i n 1Hl- ministration and the California Standard Supervision Credcn- tal. It \\•ill be possible to start this program beginning in the fall, u'inter. or spr in g quarters. The progra1n is join tly planned by the UCI Graduate School of Adntinistration and the Office of Teacher Education. t.ended Univers ity programs Sunday, Wednesday and Fri· overreacted. f I t · Jud " kii-for part-time study toward day in The DAILY PILOT. e ony coun ! inc ing I degre<>s are being initiated at'.l'===========o'..._::G:::co'.'.r'.'gC:e_Be::::•::"::.· _:co:::"":::l:_Y_:d:i::rc::c:_· .....:.":::"::_P':::.n:::g:_. --------• UC ! this year on a four-year .\. experimental basis. 0 t h e r UC lrvi1ie Narnes Ne 1v Director part-tiine degree courses of study include the bachelor of science in human biology. the bachelor and 1naste r of arts in social ecology and the mastl.'r of arts in teaching Spanish fo( credentialed te achers. Applications for admis sion and further inrorn1ation about the Ext.endf:'t! .Universit y pro- gran1s ntay be obtained front the Office of !he Dean. l!:x- tended University. $3,120,240 Spent From Allocatio11s Dr. Donald E. Polkinghorne has been named director of oounseling services at UC Irvine. it '''as announced SANTA 1\N1\ -Orange by John c . 11oy, vi ce County has actually spent chancello r for student affairs. s3. t20·240 of its f ed er a 1 revenue sharing allocations. Dr. Polkinghorne \Vas assis-The total recei~cd from Jan. tant director of student affairs 1. 1972 to June 30. 1973 ~·as at Washington Unive rsity in $10.948.373. St. Louis and pre vi 0 11 s I y The interest earned on the amount not spent during the serviced at Goddard College in period was $305.515. Vermont where he im-Act u a J expenditures. ac- plemcnted t h e '"un iversity cording to a li st made public without walls" program and by Supervisor R011a!d W. di rected the Jiving-learning Caspers. included $30.000 (or Heallh Department on existing units and •env ironmental services: $I . 1oo ,38 8 con- centcrs. struction : S44l.822 on public At UCI, together \\'ith a staff ~afrty cq uipmcn~:$137.'1·12 on of seven, Dr. Polkinghorne land acquisition and con· How a termite canhelpyou fix your toilet. ~ Termites hJve never really doneanythins for people. Except undermine their ho1nes and generJl!y cJuse havoc. Bl1.t n?\v, for ~ change, ter1nites can help you. Because \vith every free ter1n1te inspection T erminix is giving a\v~y a book cJlled H. E. L. P. -the Home Emergency L.1dies' Pal . It cont.tins over 1 SO pages of easy·to--understand instructions and draw· ings to help you handle a \vhole range of household emergencies. Llke•a stopped-up toil et. A burnt-out fuse. Or a clogged drain. _ Both the book ..ind the termite inspection are ~ree \\·ith no obl ig ation, Just ca ll Terminix. But hu rry. There are only a limited nutnber of books. 1\nd an unlin1ited number of termites. C.11! 542-7881 or 533-7580 I l ·l . l • ' • i ' I l ' " sh11ction for recreation and SANTA ANA -A Costa with a deadly weapon. will develop a progra1n of in-culture :i.nd SJ.fl ntill ion on ~ ............................ !!!!!!!!!!! ....... !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!;;.;;;;;;;;;,;;;;,;,;,;;;;;;;;..Jl l Mesan accused on arrest of !\1arsden. a British im-dividual counseling a n d I d sanitation en acquisition. assault lvith intent to kill after inigrant from car I i s 1 e , therapy as \veil as group pro-1-------'-------------------------------------_; a shooting incident in which " his estraned wife was wounded England, was a r res t e d grams for marri~d students. ~· ~ has pleaded gui lty to lesser last April 19 at his estrangL>d resident advisors and others. ~ charges and been ordered to wife·s La Habra honte after a Dr. Polkinghorne received C serve eight months in Orange shooting incid ent in which she the PhD in psychology froin t County jail. was shot through the stomach Union Graduate School in Superior C.Our& Judge James and right arm. Ohio, the master of arts in Turner ordered the jail term Pol ice said Mrs. J u d Y psychology from Hartford and three years probation !\1arsden told them her hus-Seminary Foundation, th e for machine sho p foreman band produced a .22·caliber bachelor of clivinity degree James Robert Marsden, 31. of pistol and they struggled for from Yale University and the r I I . GAFFNEY 2300 Fairview Road, after the possession of the weapon. She bachelor of arts in religious Htlen Getlney, A.Qe 11, 01 ~2~ JeHnette defend ant pleaded guilty to has since recovered fronl her stud ies from Washing Ion P!ac~. Costa MeMt. Date of oe1th, A119ust 11• 1t71. survlveo tw three t0ns, HU11n ane1 amended allegations of assault wounds. University at St. Louis. Tttomas Ga11nev, both 01 COiia Mew1 Jirr'"''"''"''"'~'"''"''"''"''"''"''"''"''"''"''"''"''"''"''"''"''"''"''"'~;,,,~~;;,;~~~~""~~1 Gerald Gelln•v. HuntinQlon B•ecn; five d~ughten, Awuslll Caon, Whltllen Sar· bara and Ft.or• Gaffney, Costa Mesa; Mary WinbUrn, M•~ico City; Marjarie Weel'.e, R')rnt. 11•N; 26 11rendcnl!dren; 11 great~r1ndchlldrl!fl. Rosary, Thurlld•Y• I P'll, Bell B•oaClway Cnapal. Reg~!en• l.\~U. Friday, t AM. SI. JoacnhJ'1$ Coth:>li' Churt n. wllh Father Ben Schmidt olliclatifl!I. Interment. Calvary Cemetery, Los Anq~~. Bell Bro:adway Morluarv, OirKIOfJ. JACKSON Mlr;Aret Ell~ Ji11clUl)ll, 900 Dogwood, Los•~ Mes<t. Dalt ol dealh. Au11u•t 17, 1•n. Survived by three !oCf\$, Charles ""° "1i&rcus J KtfOll.-Glendale; Edwan:I JJcksO<I. Ca,1a Me)!; ll)<lr d11u11h1ers. Margaret C•ull '"Cl Ca!he•lna Muders. (Gsla Mes/I; Je~ W!efflers, Camino! Ann Hust...i, fl:e<.flenCIS; 29 grandcMlldren; ll 9•eat11ranC1chUd,..n; lwo b r Q ! he r s . CraveslCle serv!ctt, Thursdav 11 A.M. HGly Seou!cher Cem.lerv, Orange. B e I! Br;'6dway MGrTu,trv. DirectGr~. '°E.Fll:OtoiEY J()lln Ne-fronev. Aot-10, of 3815 Vista C1mp11na Soutn, Qceansi!lli. Oete QI deatn, Avous! 111. 19n . Su"'''"f'<! .,., ·.-·ii• Ll,,1n1~: fhree :oons, Kf'fl Nefr-y, Costa Mesa; Ricr,1'<1 Nelronev. West Covin~: Ron11td ~efranev. Arrowhe11C1; two s Is t e r s, LeQnc•e N-orlfnsen an<! MarQue•Ha M~K~n1le. f'dvate services ~·e held. 8ell Broadway Mortuary, OirK!o,.. ARBUCKLE & SON V"\:STCLJ.FF i\fORTUARY & '\. 17th St., Costa !\lesa 6411-4888 • BALTZ-BERG ERO~ FUNERAL HO~fE Corona del !\1ar 673-9450 Costa Mesa 646-2424 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway .. Costa Jl,fesa LI 11-3133 • DILDA v er.cmums MORTUARIE;!i 17911 Beach 81,'cf. llunlington Beach 842-7i71 I 2« Redondo Ave. Lo::::IC~ ~'.~::115 11 BEACH MORTUARY 1706 Lagnna Canyon Rd . lN-IMJ5 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMOftlAL PA"RK Cemetery J\fortuary Chapel 3000 Pacirlc \'iew Drf,,e Ne~·port Ueach1 CaUromia 514-2700 •• PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 1111 Bolsa "'"· Westmlnler '9l-ll!i • SMITllS' MOR'MJAJlY U7 Mala st. tlunUn~on Beac:h ~39 ,1 c511.t Coast'Pederal'We Qffer • 73Guaranteed Certificates ·Saturday Service ·The Insiders Club Arl Unk1eUer The Insiders Club: A new way to beat inflation. Its membership card permits yo u to buy nearly every· th ing you need from the finest closed-door show· rooms at substantial sav- ings -appliances, furni· ture, stereo equipment. sporting goods, draperies and much, n1 uch more. You can even buy cars at the "fleet" price and n1obile homes and motor- cycles at substantial sav· ings. The Insiders Club Annu,11 A1HH.1.1! RJte VoclrJ 7.00%·7.25% 4 year c.r.rtlrocates, -'51.000 m•nornum 6.75%·6.98% 30 rno11th cer1 1fica1e~. $5,000 m 1n 1mu1n 6.50%·6.72% One ye11r c?rtiti(;.iles. $1.000 minimum {Penally on .111 ceriific••!" .occounts withdr,1wn pr.or 10 m.lturity.J 5.25%·5.39% On e~istin~ and new passOOOk, no m1n•mum. M,1ximum tlcxibili!y. All ll!/t'IC"SIJ> compouodrd d.11/1• a lso provides big dis· counts on tickets to sport· ing and entertai nme nt events ... plus a whole list of free services: safe deposit boxes, money or~ ders, travelers checks, and notary services. Membership requi re· men t fo r savers -$1 ,000 n11nin1urn balance. Coast borro111ers now receive as- sociate memberships en- tithng t11em to all outside referra l services. As k at any Coast office. MAIN OFFICE 9th & Hill • 1213) 623·1351 WILSHIRE OFFICE 3933 Wilshire Blvd.• (213) 388-1265 L.A. CIVIC CENTER OFFICE 2nll & 0roaaway • (213) 6ib·l 102 DIAMOND SAR OFFICE 328 So. Diamond Ba r Blvd.• (714) 595·7525 EAST LOS ANGELES OFFICE 1350 So. Solo St.· (213) 266·4510 HUNTINGTON BEo\CH OFFICE 91 Huntington Center • !71 4) 897·1047 LA MIRADA OFFICE 15222 RoY'cr,1ns Blvd.• (714) 522-6751 LONG BEACH OFFICE Jr<J & Locust • (213) 437-7481 ' ORANGE OFFICE 2 City Blvd. East • (714) 639-9071 PANORAMA CITY OFFICE 8450 Van Nuys Blvd.• {213) 892·1171 SAN GABRIEL OFFICE 117 SO. Del M<'r Ave. • (213) 287-99111 SAN PEDRO OFFICE IOtn & Pacl11c • (213) 831·2341 SANTA MONICA OFFICE 718 W1l~h+re Blvd.• (213) 393-0746 TARZANA OFFICE 18751 Ven!ufil BIVd. • (213) 345-861.t TUSTIN OFFICE 530 £, rirs! SI.• (714) 832-6810 WEST COVINA OFflCt E11suan<1 Shl)Dr !na Center • 12131 331·220 Open S.turd1ya 9 AM to l PM Nfiw /It No'1hfltt C•l/IOU1I• ASSETS OVER ONE BILLION DOLLARS TREAD LIFE PROTECTION We build 1nln eve1y Reli Ar1de'" tl1e eale 1r11ct•nn indlceto11. Thay •IO· nill when your ti1e should be replaced. II you1 tire wn11s ovt (excepl 1or Incorrect alignment) we w1tl make an a1towtir1cc b111ed on origlnal pu1cnase prlce, excluding applicable Fed111111 Excise T11)l. 1oward lhe 1'.llJfChase of a new tire. We will allow 113 llufing the fffSt hall or 1/.t during the second nail or tne sl ated month& ol 9u•111n1ec. Federal Exc'88 TeK ad1ustment 11Uowance will tie m&<le on the b1t!1 ol lhe pe1cerit or the orog1n1tl tread rem111rilr19 . RELIARIDEJ'TIRE PROTECTION GUARANTEE Vou• RellAr!de' tire p1oft1cHon gu11r21nlee covef1 all R<1l!Aro de'" pas· se'lgflr tires (except apec111r appllcatioll tirflS with sep111ate gu111ari· lee&l agairi&I au road h81ard or <le!ecl l111ru res. Vou fi fe protcle1e<1 lnr the entlra •tntnd mor1ths of gun111ntce, II youf lire !nll~ duro!IQ lhe guaraniot pe1lnd, r<!tu1n •I to ul and we w1tl, 1t\ our ep11on. 1cpal1 you1 h•e, or maka en allow1111ce be1ed Oft lhe ot1111n111 purch111t: p11ce, 'l•cludlng app!l~abla Fodor:.I EllCtM ru . 1ownrd tl\e purch~ of • n•w u1e. we wlll allow 1 00~ 01 tne original purch11&c price, c•ttudlno t1ppllcat1!e Feder!\! E•c1M T._., our\r,n tint 100% 811owl nte P@llOO. Th1realte1. we will allow M>" or~~% Qt lhe Or•ginal pur.ch11~e 011ce,• f!KCludlng eppllcabl• Fedar11 E•¢/tt Tait. IOWtitd lhe PUIC,lllSf ol • riew lire. Feder.ti E11t1"'0 at1ju~1rnen1 allow11rict will 1111 rnaite ori !ht 1.111111 ril the 1)61cent ct 1n1 011g1n11! lteMI ,,ma1n+ng, Thos Qu,1anlf!f' fa not tr1n1l11rable. It 11 only for private pi. senl)tH c;u 5 or pasaorion• station w1gon1 With 1he ou1eha1e of AeHArid111'" tires you 011:1: 1. FREE tlr• 1n111;dla1ton. 2. FREE tire 10li;1t1on eYerr !iOOO mt!~. the Great cornering Great traction Great stability 44-month guar~ntee 20 months 100°/o performance allowan ce 37.25 Was 49.95 GA70•14 lits 825ll14 3.06 F,E,T. No trade·in necessary. Sleek whitewall styling. 7,, series prolile (Illustrated) ·1 ' • • l'lv• , • ._ \ Slq FU• lfow ••• £1tlM T• FR70~1~ 1;5~14 35.75 ~1.$ 2.88 (iR10•1' '"~•1• 37.25 •98•, 3 06 HA10JU 8~~>U 39.50 £295 J.~ 1 fA701l.S 71~.1 ~ 35.75 47.95 2;.!M l~/825•1!> 37.25 411.fffi :.i.~ HR 15 8~~/85S•IS 39.50 .S?.Q5 3 ;l1 I J 115 1111-5~1 5 43.25 Sj lb :j~ 1 L 70•1~ 44.75 59.9!> 3./0 78 se ries profile for imporl cars (different tread d9sign ~ ·than shown) '\ tit• ... "~ • "" w .. f,(,f, I AR71•13 1>00•!3 26.00 3'.9b "' • llR7e11.3 •·.:.O•ll 27.!50 ae;,g)> :t.OI I 0R71hl4 1146~1• 29.00 ~9~ '" AR78AIS 29.00 ;Jlj, 9t; "' llfl'1ll~l5 30.50 •O 9~ '·1• I OIA~E City Or_ at Garditn Grove Blvd. IUIN.l 'ARK Bc&Ctl 1t Or11n.gttt!orP! SANTA ANA 3900 So. Brlslol ~·No, or So. C~st Plat1 Opt" cliolly 10 to 9 P.M. SuF1doy1 10 to 1 Open llolly 9:30 to 9,1JO, Su"doys 10to1 Ope" claily 10 to 9 ,,M. Sunffy110 to 1 i •, ·Now Styltt KNIT VESTS •7•0 KNIT SHIRTS •12& •1• . PANATILLA KNIT SHIRTS Al1trtt4 SWIAT SHIRTS '· All •I••• In hooda 1nct without hootl1I Grey 1nct n1vy, ·CHAMBRAY SHIRTS Pendleton Shirts, lAST·TO· ~IE for bl11e ch1m· br1y 1hirt' th1t .,. popular tor Jackets, · ~\\ Blanktt1, · ~~. \ •ork tr pity. Hats and Sport~oats · Se/tet o '•ndltton -~-· Alwo11 in .S11le ·~ ·: I ,,_ LEVI'S AU flUl'°SI SPORT SHOI FROM PUMA11 '*'-.JACKETS No. 14$ IAPID, Up,1r1 of full 1r1in cow~llft. '''"' inttlt ind p1ddtd to:%"'· Wflltt IUM ni•bti' toles. P1 dtd coll1r 111d ORIGINAL ''""" .. 11. llLTS ''"'' 1<hllln 51495 WESTERN . .. LYNTONI • SHllDON • CANTlllUI\ .. / STYLE SIZES 21-46 $ 5'' All Stylos to $10 EVERY BODY NEEDS .LEY.I'S® CFOR BACK TO SCHOOL!) MIN'S 'IVl'S® Sl•• '2-50 wtht. V1rl1ff11 ti colors, lncl.1trlpe1 & chtcu. MHt ltr n1l 111ntlem1n II '""' ..... . $11·$16 Levi's h11tltme11 Jta111 BOY'S 'IVl'S9 Levi's Double Knee Jeans Mt41 wlltl ptlyttttr I cott111, tllt kn .. will h 1111 It go! 4 Colon. $650 ' Clm 2·14 · To t,\atch Your Jeans tuy a Matching Jacketl 11'1 JuNble & warm Sft28 · Juit' 7 Sizes 3-16 Levi's Cord Cuffs For • kl4 on lt1t gel Only $850 . Wtdnt$day, Au9u5t 29, 1973 DAILY PILOT J5 Turtle-Neck . SWEATERS , by White ~•9 . , ., 100% polye1ter. Sis•• 7·14. A11ortect colort. Levi's for G1l1' J:~:~s I , f,--,~·f., i:1.,.._J1 All Slze1 Horol WHln ITAG POR Gilli LONG SUEYl CARDIGANS I , ,f : Pink , lt. llut, . · ,,. White, lell_, Nevy " '•' ' { Si~es 7·14 ' 5849 .. ·~ '~~ 1ii:~~ . ,,. vrr, i '/ ' .,., .. ~ .... . ~: . . Turtle-Heck SWEATER For little Girls by Whllo Stog 100% 1cryllc, Sl111 7·14. Aut. color1. Little Girls Stuff Jeans Hi·l ise 1uff d•nlnt ''''" Si1e S·1l 512'9 And Up ll•w lt11Dres111 It tho °"'·"' .. ,. Cettt11 inti ptlytfter flowtr print w/ltnt · sl ttVtl, eyelet c"lfJ and coll1r. Colors ere bltdt lfld "'Y'f· Slze1 3·13. s27'! Little Girl'• C1blt Knit Turtle-Neck · SWEATERS PRINT BLOUSES aileen Sl111 7·14 A11ort•• colort h WllM• wltti t"i Ytl- ....... Mttf '''" ,, .... llnt 6-14 s3tt.s20 ~ · LEVI'S~ CAPITOL OF THE WEST! lind It first at the Grant loysf LEVI'S FOR GALS• HI-WAISTED JUNIOR PANTS BLU!, BROWN, BURGUNDY AND NAVY PLAID PANTS IN SIZES S.13 ........................... . LEVI'S POii GALS• s1500 CHAMBRAY Hl·WAISTED PANT LEVI'S FOR-GAL$~ *Every Slit , *Every Color *Every Style MISSES HI· WAISTED 'CORD CUFF PINTS BROWN, BURGUNDY AND NAVY SIZES 1-11 .................... . LEVI'S FOR GA~ MISSES Hl·WllSTID WOOU wit~ CUffS CAMn, GREY, NAVY AND ·$2000 RID-. SIZES B· 16 •••....• UYl'S FOi GALS" SHISUClllR MISSIS PLAID PANTS RID, WHITE AND GlllN C9LORS. SIZIS B-16 .......... . LIVl'li' 'Ol GALS Hl·WAISnD CORDUROY PANTS With 11"111 ••It 1 .. ,. '""' • 1.e.,1•1• ftr 0.11-Cufft • "' ll1elc ,.cket•. 100~ cetto11. S11e1 1·18. 1,1w11, llur1undy 11111 n1vy. $1400 s1900 LIVl'S• roR GAU COUNTRY SHIRT Chttlltl1 cloth In 51400 '""" & "'VY'· Sl111 7 /8 to 15/16 uvrs FOR GALS• Jr, london PLANNEL PANT Aut. Colon 51700 uvrs FOR GALS• GINGIR INA' "PLUSH IKINN" BRUSH DINIM JACKET Sl111 $.M-1. $15 QO . ,... .. .. • DAILY PILOT Ope,.ation Worries Woman . DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: t1y doctor sajs I Deed a hysterectomy. I am 3 7 . Naturally, I'm conce r ned about the effects of the opera· tion. These questions come to mind: ._ Is it a serious c;>peration? Does it bring on an early and difficult menopause? Does it interfere with normal sex life? Is it sure to put on excess . \\.'eight? DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE As my own doctor is quite busy and oot too talkative in answering questions, I 'll ap- preciate any infonnation you can give me. Thanks. -Mrs. c. ' COMMENT. I'll try to ea:it your mind. However, even though your doctor is quite busy, don't hesitate to ask him for a few minutes to fill in any further questions that come to pester you. (As I keep saying, too many patients are too apprehensive about "bothering their busy doctor with q uest io n s.'' Remember that doctor means teacher. One of his important functions is to answer his pa· lient's questions.) But don't think I'm trying to evade your queries. First, removal of the uterus is not considered to be a serious operation. Of course, what is important is the reason for operation. It's evident that if the reason is cancer of the uterus it becomes m o r e serious surgery and manage- ment than if a bleeding fibroid tumor is behind it all. Some patients say t~y are going to have a hysterectomy when the operation is more extensive : removal of one or bQth ovaries. O r. d i n a r y hysterectomy doesn't bring on an early and difficult menopause. However, if ovaries are also removed, then hormones will take up the slack in hormone secretions. ?\1ost women say that the operation improves r a t h e r than decreases enjoyment and performance in sex. As one woman in her early 30s who recently had a hysterectomy said, "I've felt 'liberated' since my operation. I longer have the fear of becom- ing pregnant. Five children are enough as far as my hus· band and I are concerned. It's a relief to know we will not have more." l DEAR DR. STEINCROHNI I want to use tampons but I am not allowed. My mother says that they can defonn your baby, or hurt in other \Vays. All my girl friends wear them. ?\1y mother says that 1'11 have to \\'ail until I get mar· ried to wear them. Will they hann me? -Miss K. Age 13). COl\lrtfENT: I don't see how they can deform any future babies. Although so me youngsters can't wear them, I believe they are not harmful for those who can. Why not let your family doctor be the judge? Show this column to your mother and perhaps she will talk to him about it. For Mrs. H.: I can un· derstand what you mean. Shingles at the age of 72 raises the devil with patients in your age category. Herpes Zoster (shingles! usually disappears aftef' a few weeks in youngsters a n d leaves' few if any after-effects. But In the elderly, there's the post-berpetic syndrome o I persisting pain, burning and stubborn.... diJCOmfort which sometimes last for montM. . . • I w~nesda~, August 29, 1973 For Pi~•ics 1r EHry Day! ~V 11811. '1 4' I '1 _11_.011:1nc1L -~~ Kodacolo P•r Platas 128 ·OP 110 fllll Pacit 79c PricttttN tW1 T1U. ··.and much, much more\ Th• f.tked f0t Mdor Oil '"'ft' ..... .._. 5 •.. •1• MttorOll ... . Choot. from 't'Ollf' f~. C... 11odo Dty fJ~I !2-Qs. c- H~o~~!loll ~:, '" ,.~ '°~ 20 ~:i:Urt s11 s kOUI• ' pknk•, .,.,,rio1n1"g. Di.. Your Choice count pric•dl · HOLIDAY SPEC·l ·ALS All· Day Moo. labor Day, Sept. 3rd Bottle 111 -385 Rybutol Iron Plus Multiple Vil!mins Wltb Iron ,, . ., .. ,,. s2se opo!hecory jor . BIN to• yO:Urtitlf & the family. F111ll y•ar's ••pplyl Wllll( s1o'c1<.s LASl! •525 .fanDs Name CDlllH Tllreellle . : ~p·h~~~::1. s222 • Tigress ';tli le Stock last · Clo110U·I purcho1e of world-r•nown&d 1pray cologne. 112: o:r.. eo'. in gift box. Buy for gift1 a. pri1e1. Fi11 t flovor plw 1to11dout volu• mokt• 1~1 O Winning combinalion. Ma)GP Lallls I IPlllll Stereo Albums • RCA • COLUMBIA •MOTOWN • MORE • Diano Ron • Are1ho F<e1nldin s1 ~! ' S1•ppenwolf • John Gary Aoy~t;rom•r •Tommy Doruy .Mo13y Morel 8-Track Stereo Tapes G...01 gro...p of 1how I. $) t7 mood 1un•1, oldie• 'n aoodi•s, gold•n goodle._ •••••••• ~233 ,--,_.Reg_. 812·283 P.anasonic ~~$" 'f~A~FM 4 Piece ~~ Stereo .System ~ Made to sell for $More :·::·:~'~ ,':: Save '23" ~ ~:!:~7 $ 83 •r-. bu~t·lrl on- "nna, lntegrot.d circuitry, Pon- 01 o n l c I S l ""SP ••d r•r:ord chong•r. AMtlrler fflll[llft•lll"I ThrUty kyt ~.~~!;,;;,,., .. ''"" s1311 co1• with b<:1tt•ry chorg• indrco1or, e<:1rphon• ond 1hould.r 1tr1;1p. Save.ow• $6.00. While Stocks last Reg. *2988 AM-FM Dlgilal' Reg. Tr ID IF To s&Pumes • ...,,.,., Paul• • Sli1kly •J••hl •l'l•Jllll •rriDn • Ai,r '.l•llf lld:lt •Inly Clock Radio ~:-:'.:::;.:,:"'..; $2188 mlnur• g.g to •!ttp 1wi1ch. Wok• 10 1;1lorm or rodio. Sol• Id 1tote Pr.cor cir· cvitry. lvcwy whli. with walnut gro;n • •i d• pon•I•. ~1 te Stock last Reg. •4•• PlnUc Molded Chairs s3aa Powerful 400 Watt · Styler Dryer · With Brush & Comb Attachments & Case ..... r'''CtMill" Clll~F•• s1a ltiian Glas Wine Decanters 81'44 'Nt-.De Stocks las ti 15-18" glo11 d«:o,.. ,.,. ~ Cl kire-- '-clior. of •ha~ .. tit••· ~ co'" a,. lo groc• ony toble. Alr-ti~t l'op-P•••·. look &$$ mor•I For polio & poohid• por- ti•1, d~inklng fun. Ju11 In ,;.,.. for ti.. lob« Doy -~•nd. 100% nylon llning and cOYtt, l\lpM warm but feoth•r ~ght poly.ti ... fllL 100" tlp~r, fvlly w•otl!.r proofed,""°" thin• wo1hoble, 33''•75." ' Aloha .ti~ "'°"' ffttl 1torring Ol'ld lortt b\ll'n.,,· Ing. SIO(lc up -lovtl Don't a l ienate your husband'• lliends even If you don't like them advlaea Dr. Steirlcrohn in hit booklet, "How to Uve Wit!\ Ltasl1""----------.;..---------------~--------"'!'--------'i"---~:::--:"''.'"'"' Tension At Home." Far it copy. write him at thlS ,..,. .. • " •• I, • .. "' " • .. • ... '. entlosing 3S cents In coin •ndj a stamped, se11-addressed11 ... .:;:::::.::::.;;::::::..,,..!_;:::::::~:..:!.~~::!...!.....!:.::::.::;..:::.:::: .. !......:::.!:::.::.::::::::......:....;:;::::..:;;;:;.;::.:;;:;;_.;,.:..,_.;,;;;;;;;;.;..-.,;.;. .. ...;;,_ .. _.. ...... _.__. envtlope. , .. 1 I • 1 , Wedne5d11y, A1JgUst 29, iq73 Mesa's Nettles Yank~s' lJnsung Hero ~ By HOW,\110 4HAND I "He's ·"ll)e best , ... ever pl1)"4 for," "I don'l tblnk.. • I we do have to go the place for his family and be and wife °' 1¥ 0t1trll'1• .,.,. -uw· fi~)'t'l-rm'IJor .. leagocrveteran who-into every-game-with the tdea of wtnnlng1 -Ginger will be looking ror-a-pjace k> buy It Isn't the pin stripes or the Yankee spent 1ime with Mlnni!s<lla Ind ~voiand "Balilq>fe ~ gou., hot when It In the near future: • · tredlilon that has made the dWerence tn before the trade to the ,Yankees-last counts.-Ariy~ you can, get bot going io-"We spent' some wlnt!rs in Cleveland GraJg Nettles this season. winter says., to September, you're in good positloo " and It is too wet and col~ for us.'' Bui he has pchleved 1 goel ~has bad "It's In the woy be bandies the p~ers he says. . , ' Nettles was raised in .ll>e San Diego since he trepn playing professional and the fact be llllows we llllow what ~,° . Then J1e a.dds, "we'U be playln~ them area and his wi(e ls from Costa Mesa. ~seball .u Ibo stafllng third baseman are suppoeed to do ,'!"d ~e lell ""' do it. m some of ~remaininj pmes Ond we The -Yankees starting third baseman for tbp Yankees this year. ~eules is, perhaps, the uruiung hero. of have t~ w~ ~ of them to get back Jn holds two major league fielding records "I've ted t 1 1 'th f the Yankees this season. A.veteran third contention. at that position despite the presence of Jon uO:~ 0 Pay Or em or. a baseman with a power bat, he has done,-A cheek bfJ the schedble shows the Balllmore:a Brooks Robinson. pti!t f • ~t~ CO~~ to the Daily great deal for the success of the team. Yankees retwiiing horrie this weekend ~ Nettles made the most assists ln a day rom e Mesa Tues-"We're not a y()Ung team and -we for three games wltit-1he front-nm.nlng single season in i971 (412) and , · sb?uld be 1W>le .even ~gh ~ a · 1 Orioles. ~ 4l" !O\'l'.~ P!ll•! ta~· J.".ll'icipated . in the m .. 1 double play• 'This Is a finrl class organization and • doiog very •• well ngbt...., , .f ... In September\{JI• JWOl!10fl!i 6ild StVen . ·~). a1so·1n .1971 .. • : : . · the ~!"'ger mak" the most di!· b the cause ol . that (etreta>· of .91' Yankees'~;ciillld!J!rli!i. l/lem b4cit,'~ A check ·· di .tl"l . current . balling ferenc.~ he 1 says in praising Ralph gao1es ~tween the , Yalikees .and firSt into stro!lJ ~on. -t\4(. 1.. ' averages for·~ Amtiriciln League shows Houk, field manager of the Yankees . place BaJtimore cause for alarm? r Nettles BiY. 4Jlei Orange eoet area ij .~.> llirU in front · of .RobinsOn on all cOunts DOdgers'Garv~y NoL~#j~,r -. J Has Empty Feel'ing lnsi-e . ' ;MONTREAL (AP ) For the ftrsl eljJlt weeks of the National League l>Meball se8*1. Steve Garvey had wt of an empty reeUng inside. The reason was simple: Garvey was no_t playing inuch for lhe Los Angeles · Dodgers. He was doing a Jot of pinch·hlt· tlng, and doinil: it well. Finally, on June 28, Garvey was given the starting job at ' lint base. "l thought the pinch-hitting was a step- ping stone to playing regularly," said Garvey alter he slugged a home run and drove in another with an infield out as the Dodgers beat the Montreal Expos, 6-1 , Tuesday nigh!. ' Tonighl Tommy John , 12-7, faces the Sports i•• Brief . Expos' Mike Torrez, 8-11, as the two teams wind up their se850D series. Garvey continued: "For the first eight Weeks of the season sitting on the bench, 1 felt a bit Dodgers S~te All 0.-1111 •Cl•: CNN AIJ9, 29 LM Ar!ffln '' Montretl Auo. JD Hou11ori •I L.cll Angtln Aug. JI l-lolnton ti Lo-Ai>cltlel S#f. I Houlton It Lot Aftgelff 5 p.m. 7:.U p,m. 7•)' p.m. ''" p.m. empty inside. Every pro athlete has an ego to satisfy. I'm satisyflng mine by playing every day. "I knew that if t was going to play everyday. lt would have to be at first. 1 knew I wasn't talting a job away from Sherman Goes to Vikes; A~her Trails by 15 Pills accelerating rrom a standing start to a top speed of 377.7S4 mph and an average speed or 188.877 mph. e Nortlt Selerted anybody because Billy Buckner can play in the outfield. "The first couple ~f tlmea it was rough. I had played first a bit ·when I was with Albuquerque in 1969, b¢ not thal much. "T can see myself .lmpfoving eve'ryday at first and I think that's aU the ~kipper - (Walt Alston ) wants." · When Garvey wu riding the bench for the !irst two moalbs ot the season, there "'ere reports that the infielder, who came · to the club as a third baseman, wanted to be traded. ' "I never said play me or trade me," explained Garvey. "The time I went to Al Campanis. I went to find out where J stood. You've got to talk to somebody before· you lose confidence in yoursetr. Losing cOnfidence is the worst thing an athlete can do." Alston said he was pleased with Garvey's showing at first thus far. "He·s always been quick with his hands,'' s'aid Alston. "J think "first is bis best position. l think he'll improve there. •·f fell for a tong.time that be should play regularli. When he kept oil hitting, I fell I should get )lim.in." Garvey, the object of catcalls and even obscene telephone calls last season in Los Angeles, now has become a favorite with Dod&ers fans. "The phone calls v.·ere a bit migh," Garvey recalled. "My wife took a lot of them when I wasn't at home." The calls have stopPed now. ... despite the Orioles place atop the stand- ings. He ls second only on the Yankees to Bobby Murcer In home runs with 18 and In rbi with 69. He is hitting .251 compared to .246 for Robinson who has seven homers and 53 rbi. "This has been an average year for me at the plate but I don't feel I have bad a real gbod )'ear in the field," he says. Graig Nettles isn't n1aking excuses. Far from It. But he is intent on helping the Yankees _return 10 prominence and perhaps ~tnation of the American League once again and barring injury. appears j.o be the Yankees third baseman for the im· mediate future. Ull'IT .......... . r.IM'KA TO, MiM. -Irvine's Rod Sherman, a seven-year veteran wide receiver, was traded by the Denver lltooco< to the Minnesota Vikings Tues- day along Wtlh an undlsciooed draft choice fOf' wide receiver Gen e w 8'hington. • NE IV ORLEANS -New head coach John North says be expects to name replacements today for two asslstant coaches ""°ho quit in the wake of lds Qjr pointment as boss of the New Orlean•·· Saints. Garvey's homer in the fourth tnn'ing keyed a two-run rally, THi· 11.NG~LS' FRANK ROBINSON IS TAGGE.D OUT BY MIKE HEGAN. Sherman, 28, a former Univenity of Southern Cllllornla star,· is six feet tall and weighs 190 pounds, He was a future No. 1 pick ol the Oekland Raiders in 1966. Shennan played ror Oakland In 1967 and was picked by Cincinnati in the ex· pension dr~. He spent the 1968 season v.1th the Bengals then was ....,cquired by Oakland ·· ID 19611. Sherman ~ purchased by Denver in 1'72: and led the Bronbo6 in receiving last ~ with 38 calches !or 161 yards and three touchdowns. During his pro career hlo'has 104 l'el'eptions for l,>58 yards and ~ve touchdowns. • Asker T•lt!d OKLAHO)llA CITY -Barry Asher of Costa Mesa i.s in third plaoe, just 15 pins behind the · leader !loo McCune of Munster, Ind.. after two days of quali- fying in the $70.000 national cham- pionship of the Professional Bowlers Association were completed Tuesday. Asher is runnerup to McCune in the money sta,ndings this year· v.·ith almost $50.00l. Hi! second round series was 1,720 with a high game of 247. He is just one pin behind second place George P,ppas of"C1ariolte,. N.C. e Breedleve Crashes " . )\IENDOVER, Utah -C r a I g Breedlove's rocket car dld a mid-aif Oip at about 400 miles per hour on the Bon- neville Salt Flais Tuesday as he com- pleted a quarter-mlle run in which he set a naUooaJ 'i;cord, Breedlove said. Breedio~/ who was not hurt, told a \l(!wsman 'ihe mishap prevented him from trying for an international record in fils 1'EngUsll Leather Speclattt Car. But he said be 'Wvuld get the car repaired and try again next week.. • ,. ·His car ls a thret--wheel vehicle nnd thu1· qualifies as a motorcycle wider International Federation· <A Motorc:ytles tompetltlon. But Breedlove, Who waa the \•fastest man Oil earth" in the 1980s, said the reoord he oel Tuesday was tho fastest from standing ilarl for tlrat dtstan<e · by any land •ohlde. . lie said1he accident came after be had covered the quarter mile In US ie<Onds, Two men brought to the Saints by former head Coach J.D. Roberts - defensive coordinator Jim Clwnpion and offensive line coach Jim Royer -resign- ed about 14 hours after North was air pointed late .ltlonday night. e D11rhant Crltlral PIIlLADELPHIA -Yancey Durham, the bril liant manager of champion prizefighten. remained hospit:allz.ed in critical condition this morning, felled by a sudden stroke. Dur~m. 52, who handles former heavyweight champion Joe Frazier. was admitted to Temple University Hospital Tuesday morning. "He's still the same -critical, unsalisfaclory,·• a hospital spokesman said today. In addition to Frazier, Durham also has t'rained and managed • I i'g h·t heavyweight champ Bob Foster and up- and-coming middleweight Willie "The \\!orm" ?tlonroe. YANCEY DURH~ Left-hander C1audc Osteen continue(! ha mastery over the Expos, limiting them to five hits as ~ posted his 12th ti(e-lime victory over Montreal in 14 decisioos. It also was the Brea resident"s 16.th victory of the year against six losses. The only ltioatreal run came in the first inning when Ken..Singleton knocked in his 89th nm, doU6ling borne Larry Lintz. ~ Let Allflftl f')"J ' ~ll'MI OJ 'Urltrtll ftrlt,_., l.oelft, :It> l o o o B.lltey, 3b ) o 1 o Buckner. If $ I I .0 Llnlt, 20 l 1 I O WO.vi!, Cl I ' I I I F1!r1,, If ) O O t F~ c 2 1 ,0 0 Slnglelot\, rt 'O I I Gtrwy, lb 4 1 1 0 Hllr..0-., lb l O O O 'WCrtwtord, (f ' 2 2 l Woods, <'f l O I O ll!J»fll, II ' 0 1 I Foti, SI .)' 0 0 0 Cey. • ' •• I 1 MM.tr'WH, , 0 0 • 0 011ff11,p •000$11-'c 2010 ""-'t,P 200 0 ,.rlls.n 10 00 101111 Joi f I 6 Tot1b 27 I S I Lo. Af1'11n oot 700 MO -6 MonlrHI 100 DOO i 000 -1 E-a.tll~y. S!ln~. OP-LM "'-Utln 3; Monlreel I. LOl--Los ""'1tle1 s . MonlrHI ,, 2~1ngl1lon, W. 0.¥1L HR-Garv•v ... 1 Sii--W. Cr1wtont S- Llflll. ll"Mlll:ll:llSO Ollftfl (W, IM) 9 S 1 I l 2 Moort IL, 7·U l 1 Ill 6 ' 4 l 6 M, M1rtlltll I 21~ 2 J 2 1 J WP-01leoen. 1-l :1A. A-lf,1l1. Tolan: Rei.D.stated But Won't Stru·t CINCINNATI (AP) -Outfielder Bob- by Tolan won reinstatemenL to the Cin· cian&tl Reds from the disabled list, but he was nowhere to be found. When he shows up . again, manager Sparky Andenon Indicated he won1 play. Rookie Ken Griffey, called up Friday frorn Indianapolis. had two hits in each '·.of his first tbree games and stole one base in 'the Reds' losing effort to PiUSb111'1ib Tuesday 8-!. "Grirrey has earned the right," said Anderson. "He did it on his own; He has shown be can play -and nm." As for Tolan, all Anderson said was : ~·He's back on the club." Then he added, he'd use:Tolan as he ·"sees 'fit." - National League president Chu b Feeney and baseball commissioner Bowie Kuhn ruJed before game time that Tolan could not be placed on the lf>.day disabled li st because he didn't meet the requirements. C:•ll~ge Grid Roundup ~ . ' .Maddocks Impressive; J McKay Shuffles Lineup SAN JOSE -Former Westminster Hi gh football star Gary Maddocks is already drawing raves out of the San Jose Stale grid camp. "1'.faddocks has ·the best hands of any freshman receiver I've ever seen," says new coach Darryl Rogers. San Jose State faces a rul({{ed echedule, including, Arizona State. Stan- ford, Utah and California. Rogers is wary of the slate, but adds. "Our recruiting was helped considerably by the type of schedule we have. "T~l· kind of schedule wasn't a factor for me -pefore," says the former Fresno State rrientor. e Phillips 1l101Jed LOS ANGELES -University of Southern California coach John McKay made a few changes in his lineuo and then commented on the slur of his na· tional' defending collegiate championship football team. The squad· "isn't aslbig as people make it out to be," ~1cKaY said after the Tro- jans' second day of practice Tuesday. Charles Phillips was shifted from right corner to starting rover ba ck. He replaces Bill Q'Bri,.eO. who is suffering from a leg injia:y, J~mes Lucas will back up Phillips. McKay said. Moving to the right ·comer slot is Marvin Cobb, a junior who played -baseball last spring and missed rootball · wO'rkouts. Fre\:hrnan Ron Bush of San Bernardino, was moved in to back up Cobb. e Fe11J MU.takes SANTA BARBARA ~ "We expected mistakes, but there ~re surprisingly few," says califomia's heart coach. "We gave everyone a chance to play," Mike White added after Tuesday's prac- tice. It was the first competitive sessioo of the 1973 football season •• Doring tbe workout the pass offense went against the pass defense. The results drew praise from both of· tensive and defensive coaches. Linebacker coach Bill Dickey said, "The defensive secondary was very ac- tive. We had linebackers getting into the play on deep patterns. Our overa11 speed was very encouraging." e Bruins Drill LOS ANGELES -The UCLA Bruins have completed the last of two-a.day drills befor e their meeting next Saturday ,.,.it h Nebraska. a team spokesman says. Toe squad went through a heavy drill of passing under pressure Tuesday with quarterb~ck Mark Hannon at the helm. He completed nine out of 12 attempts, in- cluding a SO.yard touchdown pass to Anaheim's Norm Andersen. Today the team will undergo some light workouts as they meet 45 sportswriters at their training camp here. the spokesman said. Former Costa Mesa High and Orange Coast College sta ndout middle guard Pat S1veetland, split end Steve Mooahan, ex- Marina High and Orange Coast College athlete1 and offensive guard Steve Klosterman, fonner ~a Beach High Ali.CIF player, are biddlntl' !or first team berths. e Hiil l111proves Nitsehke Bows .. Out the Way De Began STANFORD -The Stanford Universi- ty football squad spent its second day of practice working on basic offensive and defensive assignments. Running back Anthony llill is recover· ing from a leg muscle pull he suffered Monday and should be ready for Stan- ford's first pteseason scrimmage Satur· day, coach Jack Christiansen said. : GREE~ BAY, Wis, (AP) -AJ rlll' aa itcelver Carroll Dalo was concerned, Ray NllSCbke retired, trom the G~ Bay Paden the ....e way be bad played 15,}>W'I for them -wllh d .... "There's a thing about a guy -I sup- _It's pride -but It matters whether you're cut or retired,'1 Dale aeld o1 his 1ootball :rf mato who announced his re\irement eldllY. "lt mea a little more if It's your on.,. and lt was his dtci!lon," he He bad told a !ew o! us about It " P1~en fans, Nitschke's unlrorm symbolized tbe glory years of the when the •eleran m I d d I e linebacker anchored 'a dolcnse through five National Football League chnm- plonsh\p seasons under Vince Lombardi. The !ans cheered him wildly dur~s lnlrequent \>laying appearances the ast two se8300S. A minority even young Jim Carter. who had deposed Nitschke as • starter In 1971 . '"Bclfi,g Ray's rooinmate, I know how lje really handled blmself. like a man the last couple or yearo." Dale said. "I'm sure he foll be could play more. but be's a team man and he never nn the team down." However, the end of h1s playing career was in , llt:hl this snmmer ~hen the Packers depth char! listed Nitschke behind second·yenr man Larry Hefner as wcJI as Carter at middle linebacker. "The spirit is sti ll there. but the numbers game got to me," NHschke aald. "There's no room on the Packers :1quad for three middle linebacker>, so I'm retiring. "I knew about this when camp &tailed. But I still 0>untcd on somethina hap- pening, and !'d be Illere again to help U they needed me." '11\e Packers have the nucleus ol. a real nne team/' he said. "That's why it's so tough for me lo get out ol it now. 1 stlll want to play and have felt all preseason,that 1 could play, but there's • no roo1n and J reallte thia .. football Is a tough business." Nitschke said he had considered retire- ment for several years, but "I've al ways rc111 could c:on\ributo somewhat ." '"'I've taken. ~ good care of myseU, and I still have the desire to perform,'' he said. "It hasn't been proven that J c:io't play, but retirement h:is been In the back of my mind and thlsJs the lime for it... • Ni~ke's depa rture leayes only Dale, center Ken Bowril11n, g\Jnrd Gale Gill- ingham and de fensive tackle Bob Brown rrom the Pockcrs' last N•"L Iltie seoson or 1967. e Brus Deride• SALEM, Ore. -Phil Bru•. a hard- lhrowlng quarterback from Salem, says he'll enroll this fall et Lane Communltv College In Eugene and won't play football this season. ·:i plan to study economics et Lane and then u-anllfer to a four·year school in the state and play ball," said Brus, who told Oalilomill cooch Mike White lost Fridoy he would not be returning to the Berkeley campus fl)r his sophomore year. Brus originally plnMed to enrol\ as a rreshman la5t fall at the University of Oregon but abruptly deci ded to go to California. GRAIG NETTLES Hoppy With Y1nbo1 New Goal For W1·ight -.500 Year . .. .- Clyde Wright knew some)htng was wrong. "When I got rny third strike out J. almost quit in disbelief." said the slow- throwing California left•hander in the• , ... ake or a five-hi t, four.strikeout, 5-2 vfc-- tory over the slumping New York Yankees ilt Anaheim Stadium Tuesday night. Four strikeouts for Wright is tan- tamount to 18 for Nolan Ryan or somi:- one of his ilk. ''I (Uess you guys will have to say I just overpowered 'em." ' It was hi s second victory tn five day.1 and lifted bis record to IG-17. lfte had en- A11geb Slate J All 011'111'1 ""' KMl'C cntl Auo. 2t Ntw,,_':!'ork et c1n1ornl• 7:SS p.in. .. J!Q. ll C•Utv.-nl~ Ill Chl~~no S:S.S p.m. Sf9t. I CaHforl'lll 11 Chic"° S:SS p,m, dured eight starts and 36 days without tasting a triumph. He would like to !iniBh at 17-17 before the 1973 season is laid to rest. Can he do it? ··fr r dldn'I think I could I wouldn't pitch," he answ~ed confidenUy. The Angel s and Yankees conclude their brief two-game series torught with George .. Doc" Medich, 10<:7, " the Yankees lacing Wrigbl's antithesis, tire aspirin-throwing Ryan, 14-16. ! Wfight received borne 1 fVJ1 support from Bob Oliver •and Lee St'arrton In Semf. ing 'the .iaggerln y~ dciwn 1o their seventh strai~t ldss., _" · Oliver, the Angels' new third baseman, also added a pair of singles and drove In three rims to pace Californli's 10.bJt at- tack against loser Fritz Peterson. ~IS, and reliever Wayne Granger. Oliver bas played 17 games at third and manager Bobby Winkles plans to keep him there, possibly sending llim to tbe Arizona lnslructional Lewre to bone his ski~ at bis new 'poctUo~ "I'd lite to play !lrst ii I COllld. because it's my ,•natural positioo," Oliver ad- mitted. 11But I'm beginning to feel mor8 relaxed ill third. Al frrst, I was taking my errors back to the dugout instead ol forgetting them ·like you're suppooed to, but not any more\" N• Yortc Ill , C1H,.,.._ (S} ' ••rflrtil "'""" Cl1rk1, 2tl ' 0 I .o Atomar, 2\1 • 0 1 1 MA!ou,rt '0 ,0 0 Meoll,M .fi 111 Whfl .. If • 0 0 0 FAob"-1, dh ) 1 I 0 M11r«r, tf l I 2 0 R04S....,., JO 4 I l l Mlll'ltorl, t ) 1 2 2 Ep.llln, lb 4 0 1 • GNtttles, lb 3 0 0 0 lti'ry, <'f 4 0 0 0 H•rt. dh 2 o o o P:lnfOn, H a o O; o Mld'll .. , .... l 0 0 0 Sl1n!Ofl, rt ' 2 I I Ht!Mn. lb l o o o Tll'borV, c ) O 1 O FPetlf'ln. " D 0 0 0 CWr19ht, p 0 ••• Gr11n11tr, p o o o o Tol1l1 t 29 2 s 2 Tol&ll ,SJ I 10 s N"" yark ODO 000 200 -2 Ctll~r.Ja 211 000 10ll -S ~ fomll 2. LOll-N"" York J, C&llfomlt 6, 28~ HA-It. Oliver IS. Shlnton 7, Munton "· l"M1tl1t••so ~. Pelwion (L, I-Ill J s ' i 1 1 Grll$W J S.11 1 1 C. W"'9111 (W, 10.17) f S 2 2 1 • 1-1:4'. A-t.ro. Aaron Drills Homer No. 706 ATLANTA (Al') -Hanle Aaron slug- ged bl! ?06th career home run but it fail- ed to slow the Chicago cubs -or Rico Carty's homecoming in the wiiform or the enemy. The AtJanta Braves superstar, zeroing in on Babe Ruth's all-time record of 714 home nms in a career, ripped a three-run shot and No. 33 \his season In the opening "....., Ml'MI If • •llllff 1tn Horne Alll'IS ti Moll R-.1 Harne Al.Ill • """°' n 1'13 Gtn'lff R.,,,_\rllng 2' lllDt Rutt1•1 C1rMr Re<erd 714 Atf'Oll'I fMelC Mllmbff I AerOl't hit 1 thl'M-fVl'I "°'""r -Nd. S3 .t ti.*''" 11'1d 1'06 "fell,.,. -t nacQd In _,tiff nin Wl'1'I I oroundoul, rMChld ti.1e on 111 errw, hit 1ni. • fortl'OUI 11nd tlOl.lncld Olll In nv. •PPffl'•nc.t " All1n!1 11111 to Chk•!IO M TllftdtV night. Inning off Chicago's Milt Pappas but It wasn 't enough u Ca rty and the CUbs fought from behind for a H triumph Tuesday night at Atlanta ~um. Carty clouted a two-run homer in the opening iMing -. his first in the NaUonhl U:!ague this year -and added a t\fO-run single in the filth lo keep the cubs eioM berore Chicago e>pioded !or fiv.e runs In the last two lnnings for the victory. lt was Chicago's eighth win in 10 games and left the cubs only i i. gamu ofr lhe pace or the East Division-le1dlnJ St. Lo1d s Cardinals. Aaron also drove In another nm for the BnlVes• while Ralph Garr bad lour hill for Atlanta, Including a solo homer. Bui ii was a pair of run-scoring hill by Paul Popnvich afld Jim Hickman's :sacrlllc:e fly that pusbed Chicago ahead to stay In 1he eighth. Ron Santo stroked1a - homer In the ninlh tor insurance • • -• • ••• ·; •• • • DEAN LEWIS TOYO TA VOLVO BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIALS! 1964 VOLVO 122 CPE. 4 cyl,, 4 1Pff(I, ra.:ilo, llNltr IOT"" New rff Nllll IJl•dl t11119111. $877 1970 VW BUG • crl .. •$peed, r•dlo, ..._ .. , ts7BQE, ri* ,,_ pl, Midi l•I. $1377 1f67 VOLVO 4 DR 144 4 cyl., Iulo. tr1n1., r1dlo, l'll•l•r UNZ4ll, Wllllt 11(1., lllk Jnl. • $1177 l f70 TOYOTA (,PRONA 4 DR .t cyt.. Mft. lrH1,, rldio, 1!1111r, MOAGD. S'111rlllins ... .xt ltlk. 1111. ) .. $1277 • • Base ball Standings AMEltlCAN-t:EAGUE East Dlvidoa w L Bttllimort 7S 53 Boston 71 59 Detroit 70 62 New York 68 63 Milwaukee 62 67 Cleveland 55 77 West Division. Oakland 78 s:I Kansas City 73 59 Chicago 63 69 Alitmesota 62 68 Angels 60 67 Texas 46 81 TUl'Mll'I' .. OllMI Cle>1t!ol'ICI 4, ICIMll (l!y 3 Ttll(ll $, 61lllmorr l Ml~!• s, Detroit o C:lllcago '· MllWIUkff • Oaklal'ICI 6, 8o$1Ql"I 1 C61lfornl1 .S, NfW York l Tecl•'l''I O•m•s Pct. .586 .546 .s:IO .Sil .48t .417 .S95 .S53 .477 .477 .472 .354 GB 5 7 9\~ 1311 22 51,t 1511 lS\i 16 :11 12 K.11U111 City (BVlby 11·11) ol Clrnl1nd fTldrow 1(). "' Mllw1uk" (Colborn 174) 11 ClllCIOO !B1w.n 16-ll> Tll(ll IDurhtm 11-3) 11 81lll1T1Me (Al1;119nd't 1-6) MlnllffOIO (G{)llt ~-31 ot Detroit I Perry 11-11) 801100 /Lee 1•4> 11 oa1i::11nc1 !Blue 1~71 New York (Mtdlch lG-1) 1t C1lllornl1 fRy1n 1"-lj J T111,r'°*"'1 Gl-CllYt'land at Detroit 805ton al Mllw1uk11 Mlnnnol• II TrKal NATIONAL UAOUE- St. Louis Pittsburg h Chicago Montreal Philadelphia New York Dodgers Cincinnati East Dlvl~klD w L 67 64 63 64 64 66 61 69 6t 7G 60 70 \\1est Division 82 50 78 55 San Francisoo 72 67 63 43 58 67 70 83 Houston Atlanta San Diego TwsdlV'• 01mt1 PhliMlelPl'll• 1, S1on Fr1nd1CO o LO$ A""ln 6, Monlrnl 1 Neow York I, S1n DI.go 6 C11lco110 t, All1nt .. 6 Plttst>ur1111 f , Clnclnn11l 3 SI. LOUii I, Hou1lon 3 Tecll'l''t e.n'!ff Pel. .Sil .496 .492 .469 .466 .462 .621 .586 .SS4 .500 .500 .366 GB 2 21/a Sii 6 611 4Y.o 9 16 191h 331,~ Sen Fr1ndK9 (8rMtlev l\·11 ) 1t Pl!ilffielllhl• f8rett 11·$) Los A~t.s fJOlln 11-7) •t Monlr••I tTorr11 •11> Sin Die.go (TrQeOIOl'l 6 ... ) II N~w YorK 1Kuos1n ... 1().1•1 Ch caoo !Bonl!om ~l 11 Allanll (I'. Nl"'ro 13-6) Pltt11>ur11h (8rlles lf.11) 1t Clnclnf141!t \811Ungllam , ... , $1. Louis (Will 13-10) 1t Houtton IR!cll1rd .S-1) Tllursdly's ••mn Hou11on 11 LOl Aflll•let. New York II SI. LOUii Monlrt1I 11 Phllldllplll1 • :M:cAlister's -{;onfidenee, Speed Back ,. LOS ANGELES -This is not the same James McAllstcr who a year ago admitted he had ID psyche himself up just to walk out onto the field for the UCLA Bruins' football pic- ture day. This is a relaxed, confident, mentally and physically honed football player who Ms one last college sea.son to live up to the promise that was hls as one of the moot hll?>IY sought high school nmrung backs ever. McAlister, 22, has a new position--fullback instead of halfback-and a positive men· ta1 approach. Gone are' self4 doubts that, along with a series of nagging physical ailments, plagued his first varsity season. James Edward McAlister, a psychology major, sees himself with alm05t clinical insight : "I didn't feel comfortable," James recalled of 1m•1 ple- ture day. "I fell pressure from everyone and I had ooly my high school records ID beet me up. Oh, was I nervous. "The coach called it a good year," McAlister sa1d of his 778 yards in 158 catries, a 4.9- yard average and n i ne touchdowns. 1 ( "But I said it was an average year for an average back, and that's not good enough for me." But Mc:Alister pushed aside JrustraUons of the past two years as he spoke of 1973's ac- compllshmenls -the world'• best outdoor long Jlllllp um year, '¥1 feet, ore.half inch; and a wind-aided clocking of 9.6 -in the 100-yard dash for UCLA's national championship track and field team. "Last year's season was like the beglMing of a career. I hadn't learned a thing from the year I laid off. Coming In- to this year, I've developed a greater mind for football, much Uke I hed in high school." UCLA FULLBACK, JAMES McALISTER. The u~ -making the cover of a national sports magazine wheQ he was only a freshman; The downs -being ineligible for football and track as a sophomore because of ir- regularities in his 1.6-grade point predictability test when he enrolled at UCLA, failing to make the U.S. Olympic team last year and performing in what he calls a d.Jsgustingly .a.verage manner in football. McAli.ster is a strong runner who is abusive to tack.fen. But at first he di.sllked being mov· ed from hallback ID fullbeck in UCLA's Wishbooe-T of· fensc . .. K mart KM 300 !; 4 PLIES POLYESTER CORD + 2 FIBERGLASS BELTS DUAL WHITEWALLS .... .... n•••' .... .., •xlS 12.f7 G71•11 ,,_,, ... .... "1•••• ,,_,7 ,. ". n•••' 11.t1 ... ' ,,, L71•1S ''·'1 .... 29.18 . 31.18 33.88 36.18 38.88 ,,... 2:1.tf , .... 24.11 2$111 25.11 26.ll 26.U lz.E,t. Reg. 39.97-E18x14 I 2..37 U2 ~ , ~ " 12-•t ·24•• rf11s22.2 . . f ,f .T • .a. 3.01 "" MOUNTED FREE NO TRADE·INS REQUIRED K mart KM 100 Blackwall 4-FULL-PLIES POLYESTER CORD 88 B78xl3 Plus l .73 ..... FLT f,f,T. Ea. 17:88 I. "" 19.88 2.37 Whltewons U2 U4-.Eo. 21.88 2.SJ .... MOUNTED FREE 23.88 2.75 >AO NO TRADE-INS REQUIRED 27.88 2,10 • wttlt ... ,,1111 Only. NA TINll"l .. sf .E:,T. ~ K mart KM 400, 4-FULL-PLY NYLON . CORD 'THE WIDE SSK' 70'SERIES -RA ISEDLITTERS Plys 2.49 F.E. T. Eoclt MOU NTED FREE NO TRADE-INS REQUIRED M~Plulf.E.T.la. WED., THURS., RI., SAT. -Au9. 29-Sept. 1 S!'~:!; , .... ,, ..... 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IMplC:t Mtt• "' ...... 5.--·-1.a.ta..,.....CI• 7.11 ......... _ ....... l.fREEtlr•~ 1.M;ill-....... - 4-WHEEL BRAU SERVICE f Ofl.49.96-4 Dop 29.88 By trolned mechanle1. For most U.S. con. Charge 11 ! , ...u.s..~ •nd ctmfl'Od cvs. BILL JOINTS AID ALllilllEIT i es.47.12-< Days 32.88 Replace upper or lower ball jolnts,ollgnfrontend. AT WILSON COSTA MESA Costa Mesa Girls Do·wn Lynwood, 3-0 "But l'm happy now," he said. "I ran with Mut Hannon before we started practice. He knew the plays and introduced them to me. I like the Idea of runnlng nol1h and south Instead of east and \Vest. By RON EVA1''S 01 tile P•llY Piiot St11f 00\\INEY -Sharon To\vner and Sandy Allen co1nbined. talents to lead the Costa ~lesa Ro'yals girls Pony Tail softball ''earigan lofted a changeup toward the plate and Sharon wound up a couple of times , then belted the ball to cen- terfield for the first Costa h--fesa hit The 6-foot-I AlcAlister is slightly bigger than last )'<81", when he played at 2IM p>lllld!. 'Tm already up to )jJ6 and I plan to conUnue to 213," he said. "I think I will be f .. ter becalJ.'le I didn't realize how fast l could nm unW th.ls year. In track I ran 9.7 twice and U once in the ooly three thnes I competed in the hundred." . team to a 3-0 victory over Lyn"'ood Tuesday ni ght at \Voodruif field here in first round action of the Southern Calilomia 1nunicipal federa- tion tournament. A wild pitch moved her to second and an overthrow that wen t by the drawn-in cen- terfielder for a two-base error allowed her to score. Costa Mesa had been award· ed a for feit Monday night when Lynwood failed to show but a check of the records found a schedule s w i t c b res ponsible. The Royals agreed to play the game Tuesday evening, giving up the forfeit victory in a show of sportsmanship. In the sixth, Jill Angel had a one-out gift double to left field that was Jost in the lights. f\lis.s Allen walked and Jill scored on an infield out with Miss Towner getting her sec- ond hit to drive in the final run. Tbe Bruins play Nebraska on national television Sept. a in Lincoln, but the blgg..t game of the aeaaon always is the crosstown rivalry with defending nallolial champion Southern Callfomla. McAlister won't nam e names, but he iwpecta that someone at Southern Cal cam- ed the investigation into hJs eliglblllty. CHll MIN U) Tonight the Royals v.·ill return to John Anson Ford Park in Bell Gardens for a semifinal game a g a i n s t Sepulveda at 8:30. Ountl~. lb WIUl1ms, lb Feen"re, lb AnQel, 11 All..n, o Rulr. c Townw, II AYO.Ioli.. rl MtGrllder, rl FrtQOll, 2t1 Reid, ct TOll!I • , Ill ,... 4 0 0 0 a o o o 2 0 0 0 J l 1 0 I 1 0 0 l D O 1 l 1 2 1 l 0 0 0 a o o o J o o a 2 0 0 0 11 , l 2 Miss Towner scored the first Royals run in the second in- ning. Lynwood pitcher Sharon I~ It}' IMl"ll "I wish I coold guarantoe that we'd beat USC," be said, "but that's fanlaslzing. I will say that when we play, the Trojans better have their heads buckled "" pre t t f light." ' H E Co1t1 M•w 010 002 O-l 3 o L~nwood 000 000 0--0 3 I Gardea Selected All-state In Pre-season Grid Poll ~1ater Dei High's Jim Ga rdea has been selected on California Football magazine's 1973 all.state football team. Gardea , a returning All.cIF Southern Sec- tion halfback, ran for 15 touchdowns and averaged 5.l yards per carry for the Mon· llrchs in 197%. He, and returning quarterback Steve Martindale, are expected to give Mater Del its best shot at the Angelus League cbam· pionships in sil years. The past five seasons have ~n Mater Dei frustrated by ~. 7-2, 7-2, 7-2, 6-3, 5-4, ROGER CARLSON and 4·3-2. missing the playolfs each time·, That's not bad for most schools, espedally when you're annually knocking heads with such league opponents as St. PauJ, Bishop Amat and Servitc . However, in view of. Mater Dei's past (,four CIF titles and ei~ league crowns), It's not good enough. Former COsta Mesa High, orange Coast College and University of Washington player Gary Carr takes his shots at leading Mater Dei back to the playoffs this year. The only otber Orange County player to make the magazine's all-state selections is Servile High Unebacker Steve Kenloo. * * ':* Orange Coast area players pictured Include Newport Harbor's Gavin Hedrick, Huntington Beach's Greg Nitzkowski and Unlverslly'• Jim Green. * * * Selected to finish first In the SUllBel League ls Westminster, a notch ahead of Santa Ana. Newport Harbor Is rated fifth, lfunUngton B<ach sixth and Marina. last. Sanla Ana Valley Is Jabbed ahead cl Edison. Fountain Valley and Los AJamitos ln the Irvine League. And San Clemente coach Allie Schaff will be pleased to know the mag figures his Trttona third in tbe Onmge League behind Brea and Sonora. Miss ion Viejo's chief rivals in the Crestview League are Orange, Villa Park and El Modena according to the publication. * * * Mater Dei basketball fortunes in the future may ride on the shooting eye o! lreolunan Mike Kamaka, a ~ prospect from Garden Grove. * * * Oralige County's early, early Top 10 prep football teams: 1. Servile, 2. Westminster 1 Mater Dei, 4. Santa Ana Valley, 5. Edl90D: s: Western, 7. Fowitain Valley, 8.' Kennedy, t. Ne"-port Harbor, 10. Orange. ·, * * * Rather than forego Monda_)' night football "" the tube, Mater !lei Hlgl>'a, quarterback club has switched its weekly metllng ID Wed11esdaY nights. Seesoo tlcketa !or six Mater Del home games are on ~le at the Mater !lei alhleUc department !or $14. * * * Of the 16 Orange Coast area prep tea1111 five are with first ymr coocbes. Mack Mm (El Toro), Bill"~--(!!4Jaon), Jim Hemsley (~stancla), Gary ewr ~Mater Del) and Mike Henigan (Marina) li>ake their debuts as head coaches. Leading In tonaevity Is Bill Bos .... 11 ...i,. enter> his liilhl>oar at Weotmlnsjer. Bo111ell ls fo1lowed by Llguna Btocb'1 IW Akins (13), Fountain VJIJ•Y'• Bruce Pl~onl Celg~) and. Clnoa del Mar's Daw Hol1tnd (1even). After Uiat they're all relaUvely new ID tllO area althoUlh Ml neoessarUy new to coadung. Entering their fourth year are Mission Viejo'• Bob Hlvner and Unlverstt}>'1 ~erry Redman. It's the third campalp for Newport Harbor's Don Lent and C.OSta Mesa's John Sweazy. And San Clemente'• Allie Scliaf! Dana Hills' Tony Leon and ilunUngJooi Beach's Roy Brummell begin their S<COtld SCl\5011, Alamitos Racing Entries •ouaTH RAC• -l!O v••dt. l v~•r Ol(IS I t'' Clalmh11,1. Pur11 IMOIJ. Cl•lm1nt r c, .-. Scl!Oll'r S La. J. M1t1ud1! 1 ~7 01*\ff'll Gun. S~ Tr11sur1:,l Ill Run Moon Mun ft flnnk1l 111 Truc:kll~•~1 I · '.J]ltkl 172 ~ K• Cn•rj•· O. Morris) 119 ""kv u Jly, 1 • 1rdl 119 1tr'1 lmn;t, co. K11lono 119 Plf'TM •.t.cl -170 varOI. l v1ar cilod"I a. uP. Allow•nce. PurM 1:000. THUJ/ ~ETHOD LONG PUITS REQUIRE FIRM WRIST ' A fmn stroke is very important on 11 long putt. ~hen you're faced with a 40-foot putt, you 1nay not sink the ball, but at least you wan t to get it close eno ugh to the cup to sink It wilh a second putt. In order to get off a good long putt. you've got to mak.esure your hands and wrists1 are firm at impact. Wat ch to see that your left wrist, in particutu1 does not break. as tho clubhead meets the ball. · You shouldn't allow the left wrist to break until it has moved well past the original ball posi tion. If the wrist does collapse too. soon, you'll turn the clubfa1..-e t~ the left and push the ball in that direction. • I • • L < < , • • FO/f D•vld !J. O,..'f"'l 119 8M Ct11'1 CholCl.1 tE. Gllrill 111 Q n Chlrv•I 10. 1.1rdo1~l 119 11!1 •i.rlnq, M. 9~klll 121 t ~.I. 1 ~1111• Ml11 B1,1x, S. Trensurel 111 \======"'~~~W~•~....,~~~;.(;;·~~~~~·======~~~ 11'1'•1 P111, (ft. •nktl 119 10, •v•nn•h's 'j' IJ. W1rdl 119 ntU Bit, (C. mlll'lj 1" A u •!fir• Scor• in spite of traps, bunkers, rouah a nd downhill lits-wtth P~~ ~:'·~~/ jefrH\urtJ \\: th• help Arnold Palm•r otters you in his booklet '"Troubl. f't-.e :i-flll'*d 1c. Smllhl n1 Shots."' A copy is Yt>Ur5 for 20c along with 1 1ta~ped, self- Vhll'W 11, 11. A o •I 1n addressed envelope sent to Arnold Palmer, In care of. this news- SUCTM •Ac• -llC v•_rdt. el<ll. "-11-•IK•. PvrM \200ll l'n11 Or>. !II AIMLr) Mr. Cult Brhc~ (N. P1"lol l l11!'1tl1>1 I( 8 1r, 0. knlQhtl E1tv 9111 <;.l rl ( • Marrl1l -· °""'""" "" l.lftkn1 ·sunn'Ow.r, !IC. H,..,u Hol" l oom, CD. Mlkhfll) Min• Cit, tC . Sml1r.) W1r Chlc:'I ldto (D. C1rcloJ1) Cl\a.rcialwnd...O, Is. Tr11sur1l AIM lill<illltlt llundtlll, IC. $mllh) 1.Mldll FKt, Cit. lltn.kll Ct! Houw, (J, Dfw~I Ct lltt ln (r\lllCtl, IC. Htrfl •M' m ·~ '" m '" m "' ·~ '" "' "' '" "' •• llYINTM •Aei="'3SG v1rd•. l y1•r old1 • up. A~owan«h P11rH $.000. Al•~•, c. lmu I 113 JOYoo.11 F•Y• $, r.1W<t'l 111 Mldnlt hl BK y, IJ. W1rdl 111 Go Elforlltsslv, \0 , C•l'do1•) 111 Ult r IJ. Orey"') ?J pitper. quarter Horses Ala1riitos Results .... Tw .. ly c1 .. r a ••" l"l•ST aACE -l50 Ylr(I$. 2 Yffr ol<11. C111lmlng. Pur~ \1600. Alto ran -Mr • ...,,.,,.,..,, Fod!•e 8•Y• Chlc k1go. NtvOO-''' Parr, svn- dlt1lor, 01noy•1 EPl'•~s. No S(r_.l,hft. }}amp Net Ducats Available r .. 'I ' • - " " ••• u ~~.t•••l Cot••• hU!~~·<l"••GY• \, •'• . KINK OS 4 l I. c _,,..,y, O• ..... ~J DJJ Jlal At Meadowlark CC 'rickets go on saJe this1\-----------,":' weekend for the 44th Annual J>aclfic South~·ett Senion ten· nL~ champim1shlps at the Newport, Beach Tennis Club. Bob Abbey Is the club chain· pion at /11cadowlark Country Club of l-lunlingtou J:ieach aftc .. posting n 54-hole score or 21•1 to win by seven strokes . \Vhittet was one of 11 club pros 111aking the lO:Umament In a. qualirying even t at An- nandale Country Club or l)nsadenu this week. It was a 36-hole event with Whittet posting u 74-77 -151. The tou:me.ment, scheduled co1lri>C and the Los Lagos long Sept. 10-16, will feature a course. special $10,000 Junior Vetera~ CompetiUon will b<? in flights event for men 3S and older, wlth the championship group and such fonner Davis Cup fr"m 0-4. First fll11ht will be 5· stars as Alex Olmedo, Pancho "' b t>Ot "'~ (Afll .... 8 handicaps. second flight (or Segura, and Bal'ry McKay urc cou• MtM, c.11,.,.1111 I 9-12 and third flight for 13·18 slated to cornpet e. l'tli. (71 41 t7t·2JSI lhtnk Gowdy clrn;cd with 11 221 1~1hlle Don Boaz in third !)lace "'as 222 and a rormcr .Junior Ro:;e Bowl quarterback for Compton Colle~e. Gordon Lo'!an, was fourth at 223. B ig Ca1111011 In a n1ember·guest toonia· mcnt at Big Canyon Country Club of Newport Beach this \V~k. Dr. Doug ~tcBride and Jack Conners posted a score of 255 to win low net honors. handicaf)5. Golfers with han· Con1petition In s c n i o r '~!..~i!~~':i'.o!'· di caps 18 and over n1us1 piny -~si~ng~l~es~,id~ou~b~le~s~, ~a.~1d:_'_"_ix~ed_.'.!'!11'!11'!11!!"i!' !!"~'!!4!!1 !!'!!"~·~5~11~0!1111!!~ to an 18-handicap. r <toubles is schedulL'<i . For further inforn1ation, contact 1ournan1ent dire<.•tor Joe Costello at \2131 624-8232 during the day or (71-1 f 962· 2357 in the evening. , Competition in fli ghts ot~er lhnn the chanlpionship are still unde,. way. S 1111ln A 1u1 T1\'o chan1pionships will be conducted sin1ultaneously al Santa Ana Country Club over lh1~ Labor Day v.•cekcnd. The annual 1ncn's club rhampionship will be con- ducted on a match pla y basis over the three days "'ilh t\\'O rnunds on Saturday and single r!~unds on Sunday and ?<.Ton- da\. Dave Quisling and his guest finished second at 281 V.'ith Harry Fahnestock and his ,e:u£'st third nt 26.1. George l·lolsf('in and Joe Ordway were fourth with 264. Others inc luded Tony Kopp :ind guesl. also at 264: Ron 1\1cker and guest (264 1; and Jin1 Ne\vquist and guest at 2G6. (:ross \vinncr~ \vere Tomn1v Tl101npson and Bud Bradley 8t 270 . At the s<1mc t.i1ne, the junior chan1pionship v.•ill be staged involv ing the top eight juniors \rit11 one match each day . f)ld Rn11 c h 'II • .,. j Oki Ranch Country Club of 1 #S IOll 9" l e O Sea t Beach was the scene of Richa rd Ball of Tuslin th<' fou rth annual partner bet· scored a hole-in-one on the 195-Te·· ba ll tournament recently ,·ard s.i:;th hole at to.fiss ion Vie· \1•ith Vic McCartv and Bill jo Gold Club this week. DeC"ble Sr. repealing as '"in- Ball used a three iron to ncrs. rover the distance for the ~fcCartv and Decble finish· l9111 Hole nnounc£mrnr- A fe\V openings remain for TONY 110T1c ,, ""'v prt1u1 t• annou"c• 11'1• 111w 1Dc:•llM I ' Ill hi\ "0KFOllO CUSTOM TAlt.OlllMG" pr•vlou.iy loc:•l.O Saturday's Onta rio 500 CC ebn· 0,. Co•it M1thw1w ;~ corona 1111 Milr, Iv golf tourna1nent al Ontario 1 .,011111 "'""i.nr u•e 10 Ill•~• •II my c11uomtn ._, ,..,, Natona l Golf Course. o11•on1te1. No w 1tc111d lft 0Es1or.1 PLA1&, r.i~w,.oRT For further infornlalion. CENTER, convenLefllll' 1oc1r.o •PPD•lto N-"'' c ... ,.,. ,it w•PI. Amplt !Hlrilillll iY1i11alt, conlact Peter DePaolo at ed NOW 6oi119 11u,ineu unOtr my own 11i m' ... Ontario Motor Spc wily. The Santa Ana City golf T..,., 8111c ch<1niuionships \\•ill be singed CUSTOM TAILOR & DESIGNER at \Villowick Golf Course Sept. -ALTERATION S - 240 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE (SUITE 111) 114-'*0'21 15-16. An enlr'." fP.e of SW in·1 L===============-==c;;o'~ el ud es 36 holes of meda l play 1::. and comoe tition will be in four flights including the cha1n- pionship group from 0.6 han· dicaps. Oilers Lose Key Lineman .. ' coveted ace. I-le is a 12-han-ed in a tie with Dick Vescio Hvntington Beach fligh foot· ~icappcr. and Don Slavens and ano ther of Hal King and John Cochran. baU received a stiff jolt Iflesa Verde In the sudden-death plavoff. recently with the realization '''i\lie Barber \\'ill rel.urn to Dceble and McCarty won ·on that gia nt defensive tackle rlefend his Southem California thf' second ho!e . Richard Ayres has moved to Pf;A club pro cham pionship al l\.fike B!un1 and Teri Conlin Utah . " ~.1-J ' ''1' • !t • ~{csa Verde Country Club \l'On the gro,ss low ball awa rd Ayres. a 6-3, 250-pounder, Ho"·ard Chevrolet.. annou nced the ~·inners of their curr'erfl Sept. 9-11. \Vith a 142. was billed to start at defensive hUV:l' "cll'an-up -to clcnn·up'" sales cnmpftign. . tackle for coach Roy Brum· The \vinncrs were Paul O'Neill and Mark Sl;lch~. lrl t.he 1n • Iflile Squtrre Co•l.u 1'1esa . . ll•rvie\\' it ,v11.s asked ho\v th"" '"ere able to v .. 111. nicy stated mett s Huntin gton Be a c h thn!, "i~·e offerro bi~cr discoutlts than any or ou1· con1pelltors." Skip \Vhittel, head pro at There arc still some open· eleven. Thpy also expressed their desire l'o \\'In again by continu ing" to FOURTH RAC~ -"°° vards. 3 re•• ~"ountain Vall ey's Mile Square in"S in the Costa l\1esa city He can bench press 365 ofrC'r bl<>••cr discounts and be tter allowfl.nce on trades. . okll. Cl•lmlng. PurJ.t $2000. TM A B f'-"" w A A11 .. ne1m Al'l(I~•. r.olf Course. ha s qualified for golf chan1pionships to be stag-pounds and was counted on lo Th f'nt.ir<' sal<'S staff at 1-lo\vard Chevrolet are eager to ~'ln s:ttl• w11r Chi<. it. Ad•ln I" lhma);tr, (~1 Hirt) l/: "~'I '"'" '"· '"'' $CMC •I Holk•, 10 . K~lqhll llt o.ilohrtully (C1rllol1l 21 .0CI 1 . .0 S . .O Shr19(1« (W1rO ) J . .111 3.:Hl , •oc:klr1' Dot I Orlt'l'lr) 1.60 l lOHTH a Ac..-=-iso y1rdt. 3 yHr olds. AU-llKt. PUtW 1'150CI. < > T .. rv SPlnn. (J, Ol'IY'll") I WMI• Oe\lr•, (0. Klll9hll Ill '1 CGlllY. Cll. Adlir l II COltY. ti. Trt•lUft l no Glr'I. Uc H•rl) HJ ''"'" Allefl, (o. Morr111 11~ Go Dk tr.'1 B•Dy~(O. C1rooi:1) la M•YOl'rU, (M, k k-'l ·-f'le•,u,.. i.it. C • Paoel .... C•rlll't 0.Hm. (R. ll1nk•l lU ..... lli.u.M El TOfo P•rkerl/S· Tr••turrl l'M H1vlod1 OOllY, . G•ri•l HJ Miu Anotl k!Md, flt. Adalrl ns NINTH IACl--:::G) v1ri11. 3 vear ald1 • ""· c111m11111. PurH Sl'°3 CL•lmlnt prlc.. t ltOO. l'l1 M" -~(H, '"'' ... ., W1r I hie. CC . !.mllhl Ill Bud Eve O. C•rdol'•! IH Ov,..rno Petrol 111. B1nk1/ •,n,, Afiomltof Sl90, IM.. lllclltl Jtfko, (IC. M•rO 1?2 SOI Rklll1 ... CJ. Or1y1rl 11n1, Dool.ct 110'\I. CJ W1rclJ i.lfilt St.,., (S. 1'1"M1ur~i 119 eur111 ,.,,.,,,.., 1P.-~\:~ill. 122 Mr. Aslnt lf'llH, (H. PIOI) llt Go Misty J~ (C. Smllhl 1 lt I'm l•r a, CE. G1r11I 17' o.t'nl W•lch, tK. Cltrluel llt Time -ll.20. Aho ren -Cool Mis!, K11il Gold. o_.., In L.ovl. W-y Ma. Llghl Llml. LUl11 Reod 1-1..,, wtw C1ll. Scr1t(l\lcl -BtonOe Jot. Aroo Qulnm1. Crilc VR!wt. 911tiy 0-111. '' EXACTA -•·Dlll1Mfunr ... '""'°"' ptld 111 .... SICOMD •ACE -»O r•rds. l ye•r oloi a. !JP. Cl•imlnQ. Purv $HOO. Dlvldefld'1 Bar CCro;t!Yl 9.0 4.to ~.70 J1!11r• IKniOlll! '·"° J.l'O Bid WM (AOald l .llO Time -11.95. Alfa r1n -Wll<k Crffk (Al(. ftoy1I SllYll' 81r, TM Counl. Deoec1 Tonio, Mr. Up.-t. No Kr1lchet. THllllD •ACE -lSO y.t.,h. 1 ve.tr oks.. Allow.tnce. PurH ,2000, Tiie Brea Ser>lor Cltian• Club. Ou • Pre•OO•ll~e !T>'ffwrel .,_, 3.60 l .60 Amerlt•n Gent IAll•l•l l .IO J.20 l ittle Tiny Go CCrOl.byJ 3.10 Time -11.J,, Deep Sea Fish Report SAMTA MONICA -50 •nQI..,,: S6 c•ll(o 1>111. JO 1•nd bin. 74 bonl1'0, l bllll)Ut. l•'W' -11 1ngle<I' 11S mtt;l..1r•I, llS bonito, 1110 roc:k (OOl, 10 blrracl/U, ! lllllb\11. oc•.t.NSIOI -!IS •nol•fi: t bl•· rKlld• • ..,. bonito, lSt c11!co wu. t M lllKI!. 27 roxt cod. SAM Dl•OO IMU11lci111I l'!"'I -J61 •nel1ri; ,._. vellowllol. 6 blue fin lvn1. U Pltftbuf, 3'S banllO. 'II blrr1<11d•, t:5 <•Uc• W•lo '44 roe:!.. cod. VEMTU•A -12 1nt;1lit<I ' "° c•lko bffl, UI bl"" b111, 91 bonito. 7 lltUDl.rl, 1" rflCk cod •• cow cod. I Ung '"'· HUMTIMOTON IEACH IMcCull1ll\ I-lt ll\l'llfl: 110 c"llco w ... u bonllo. 10 ls.er'r•u.Jd•, 110 rodl cod. l"A•ADIS• COVI -1n •'19111'S: 211 rock cod. 75 c1Uco 11n1, 6 yllltwl•U, 15 bOnlfO. 1AM "•oltO -.. .,.1 ... 1: 15 r t!lowttll. 97 Don!to. 6 callto H si. 1 Dista nce Run AA Cl_, 0111111<• 111111 Al S•ll CllmMI• Open l Mllt1 -l. Biii 511~1. tSCI l . ll k~rd LNdum (hodltlbKk), J Frtld h'-IF'11111t1mi. Time: U :U.1. ••nd bins, 12& rock cod. 1n11t1 51. L..111· or..,1 -'5 •nql•r1: 1 ye11ow1111. lt 1;>.1rr1cl,ll'l1, 1l c1ll<o bill. 10 s•nd be11, 151 bonllo. l t:>lu1 wss. S7 rock cod. MAl.llU l'l•R -JJ •ngler1: IO c1Uco bl1$, .io bonilo. LONG •EACH Clri"'"I l'IHl -Ml 1ngl1rt: 1 ytllow11U, S7 bonllo, 6 c•lk o Mn. 231 rock coo. IS m.aclterel. 11,.e -7J •nel'"': lllO bOllUo. J barr1Kud1. t h•llbul. Cl'l~•I L""'l"'I -411 •nolerl' 1 yellowtall. n blrrtcud•. ~ bofll1o. II• ClllCO Wu. 1!<0 roc:lt cod. 2 11111;1 cod. Nl.Wf"ORT l.t.rt'1 L1rtdl11t) -9l •nol1r1: ' yotlawl•ll. lS bonHo, ff 1>11s, 10 rock cod. (0.WY's Locker} -161 '1ngltr1: l 1>1rr•cud•. m bonlro, 11 s•nd b.ts~. 2 Y•llOWl•ll, ZJ2 roc:k cod. 11 mtck1r11. llEOONOO ~ 171 anv!t1rs: J whit• ..,. bill. l yettow11ll, 1' blrr1cl/ll1, 5'3 bonito. 296 c1llco blsi, '°2 roc:k cod 811"91 -n1 •neler., 2 \1Uow!.tll. 6 b•rracud• • .so bonito. 11 m11Clcere1. '9 IOCk Cod. OX NA•D -216 '""''"""' 7 white te1 1Ms1, 7 bltck Ml blu, 7S5 t•llco 11111, t4 w!'ld M11, 112 bonito, 110 blue b•ss. J.15 rock cod, 19 Uno cod, 9 h•llbul. llllOR•O IAY IV/'11'1 Llndlnel -1611 anglers: 21 llng cod. 510 roc:k cod. 11 t1lba«tr1. !Sill SlfMOn) -ll6 1119l•rs; l t lf!lll cod, \,111 roc:k cod. AVILA IAY fl"orl Sin Lllll) -16 1111;1l1r1: SU roc:k cod. 2 lino cod. l'ORT HUIMl!MI -tt eng1er•: 195 c•tl<o blu. 322 bonito. n NrrecUGa. 24 hilllt:>ul. MA•IMA OIL •llY -45 1nglt1rs: 1.56 roc:k cod. JO bl111 b•u. 4 bonito. Hobry V•n B1• tB•nluJ the National PGA club p~ cd at Costa Mesa Gol f and anchor the Oilers' defense. and ar ~nxio~s ~o serve you so they t~ can enter the w1nn1n1: 26.60 '·"° 5.60 " . . In be ranks "'Ith O Nl'1ll and Sachs. Third LrM91 1cardoz11 '·oa 3.70 fessiona ls championship in Country Club Sept. 8-9. This IS go g . to,, one Tncidrntl.v, Paul O'Neill 11-as appointed used car manager as ",m,!!! A-ll~r·••'·Treiiu ... i P1·n·hurst, ''orth Ca r o 11· n a Com-t1'l1'on w1·11 be over h rd lo f 11 says a '-"~ ,... , 1' "" a vacancy I , a rN;u[t of his excellent µerform ance during Ole first t\1'0 \.\'et>K:> Al'° ''" -OupU<•1• oe. Sam's beginning Oct. 18. both the l\1esa Linda short perplexed Brummett. of the campaii:m. w~r Man. Gel ftt.Oy. Ml11 Goo<1 1 _ _:_"_:."_:._'.'.._:_ _____________________ __:_: ________________ :__ ____________________ _ B!rU. No S(r•lcM1. ---- Fl"H llACIE -lSO Ylfdl. 3 Ytl• olds I. !JP, Cl1lmlno. Puri.e U.00.• Tne lkc~lri Emt1l11¥H"t Club. LH ear W1ltll (AO•l•) J.00 l.IO l.40 Buddy WtY ... IW•rcll 1.1.0 4.IO Nllt Fllglll !Smilll) 4.00 Time -17.9', Al.a r1n -Roc:ket To ~. Rut:IY l1rr.Olll, Mr. E1klma, NUIY NOT•. Sir Ml.Ir. Jdmnv M~•l>I•. Hr Bound . Scr11cnld -Tiny Wlldi 8ovnd. SIXTH a&CI -.UO y1rdL l vtar 010. 1. uo. Cl•lmlno. PvrM uaoo. Or1w Pl•Y (HIM) 11.20 7.10 6.60 J•11• Ml IGlrll) 1.20 1.1111 Bu11tr Cutt B1r \Plot) 11 .00 Time -II.OJ. Al'o r1n -F"I' Bl1lr, 11111'1 Reque.d, P•lleo ROlld, Goll• B•r Too, C•llCla B•y B•r. Scr11tMd -Oon1 Meir. 1$ IXACTA -7.0r1w l"'l•l' I !1-J•"I • Mt. ,..kl »Sl.SO. _ I llVINTH RACE -400 v1ro1. l vur old1 a. up. Cl•11\lle<d •llOWll'ICt. Purw MOOO. Thi l1<1un.t Hiiis SMklle Clvt:>. PKcldlHo IWlrd\ 4.40 1.60 1.40 Rockv o.n-!Tr111urel l.60 l.40 Vl,.......n (Adtlr1 J.60 Time -20.06. ALlll r•n -Assurtld COiiy, Ret:>el'< Ot.lffl\, 1 Kr.ow Tnl! C.lrl. I'm Nor Slttpy. No IC••lchft. l.IOHTH llACI. -400 r•rcls. l year okll. AllllWll'ICf. Purw '2500. Fllck• Dt<:k (Ad1!rl 16.0Cl 6.80 5.60 Euer•ll'I Wnl1 (H•r!l 6.20 4.4G P~'I Llmll (M•hudal S.00 Timt -20.1 •. Alto r•11 -VR!ll1'• Ch•r11er. Sneak An•ck, A1ur1 e1r Go. Win A J~. Color M1 Plllk, fl•lgnlng ST•r, Ch1rt1ln On. Scr•lcl'.ed -Luc:ky Shlloll, Te Bet!. » IXACTA -t·Fllck1 Dick & 3· l¥t>nff'1 Wlllt. ,.Id lut.00. NINTH •ACE: -170 yard1>. ) y•art old1 I. up. Cl•lmlng. PurM 12600. FllTY Gr•l'ld \W•r~) 6 . .cl 3.W l .2D OOtl IC1•• (G•rre) 11 . .0 • . .O lOP S1lnl {P&Qel •.60 Time -'5.IS. Alla ran -C•lllorn\a S11\ds, F!•1h Aler'I, Ml Pie, Hy Sltln{llr, RFIDOnl•n. 5cr•Tclltd -Chlldel'• Rose. Mr • .AO•· q\Nll, Ma! ...... U IX.t.CTA -2·ptltly OrlllCI & l·Deon l( .. r, ~loll Ul6.M. ' FOR COMPACJ:ANDIMPORFCARS ATLASS.S:M RADIAL SUGGESTED EXCHANGE PRI CE. : -· -. -. -·, HS 2 Miit -1. llf'r)I HIKldl1t1IOt1 (SC I J. Tom And-.rlM (SC) 3. Jim Lonlhtfl (Dlllll HIUll. Tim.: 10:21 l'f'Oll'l..Soclth 1 Mitt -M•rk H•skhu ISCJ J. f..,, lloblnlM (SC! J, llorY R191lo !Covin•). Tl"": 11 :02 SEAL. IEACN -in 1noler1: "' rocli cod, SS mackerel, JO 11nd bits, l~ bnlllto. • ytllowl•ll. ...... -16.J cp;;;;;;;;;;;;;.-.-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;il til\fll!rt! S barr.>(U'\t, 2'1 llOfllla, 1' 11 ·Radial construction for bet'ter tire mileage ·4-plybias construction 1111nd blu, 17 "'ntivt. • ,_,. llU•TUC•Y IT~ IOUl!!IOR WIOSltlT. DllTlll(O AJIO 11onttO IT TN[ MllllS I. tu.Ill OISTILUJllG co~ CL(bl!OftlT, llAlll, lttlllTUCKT. Robert J. Wi9more SEE us FOR Auto -Hom1aw11•rs -l u1!n111 lntut.tnce -l o"ds -lif1 - H•1lth or 111y ath•t typ• of in1ur•nc•. w, wotk fot you! WIGMORE '"""' INSURANCE 2'11 H..W l ..._.C .. te Mne 979-2555 • 5-ply rayon body ·Six white wall sizes BUDGET TERMS AVAllA1ILE Wit CHEVRON NATIONAi. lRAVB. l:ARll Americll~ l'ad Abo lbmd THE ECONOMY DRIVE IS ON ••• ALONG THE CHEVRON WAY ·Nylon cord body • 5-rib tread design I ·Sixwhite I wallsizes Chevro n Standard Stations · Chevron Dealers IM: DAii.. v PJlOT tUMILEWEEDS MUTT & JEFF RGMENTS . ' ' ' ' ' ~ANCY Wednesday, August 29, 1q73 by Doug Wiidey by Tom K. Ryan l'M ON AN WJNOM'f' VACAflQN. by Al Smith by Dale Hale by Ernie BushmiUer DOOLEY'S WORLD SALLY BANANAS YeaH. 1>1 a suPRR PeRsON.M'< Joa IS To see Tl-IJN' INNOC;ef.JT PeoP'e aRa NoT UNJUSTLY HURT: GORDO MOON MULLIN S ANIMAL CRACKERS ..JUST TF<YIN'To P•E/llSE' TH' Boss, LOR!> p. ... s.zq by Charles 1anott1 1:-1 \ll!RY caRero~ (.Jf/6N I SIT powN. by Gus Arriola by Ferd Johnson WANTA SIP OF MY SODA? 'NO, THANKS-···I NEVER DRINK WHEN l'M DRIVING * :.TODAY'S CBDSSIDRD PUZZLE ' t, JilCAOSS 46 T_., .... t 1F~ • .= ...... .: ~ lj\tjng •1 Insect ,. quarters: ~ Vet"f -'1 .10.1'.S1~ ~ !' e Crawled 51 Olefs : :0 -cadllbrl aburdilntly , • ...,_,iene Greelr:: 5o4 ~llC9fll t cf,ty 58 AOotn: ~ 'Tl HiicktlaiM 1cr EIO LIQllid : Lucille .....,_. ~Long l'ISITOW .. C.~2 , , llOICtl WOfda J!l Stlrubs: 2 93 Glut: words 64 Anlllt of • '9et .29 _1e WoM 66 Bird ,.l?J l id 6e English • 2l l ho&e w l'IO college Dl•Y rolet: er J(inds ~3 W•s iflco~ 88 .,s.. __ '.25 OrOD ~J &al~ -21 Don ..iu.t·• 99 F .... caiod ~ mot~ ·29 Monkey DOWM ,Bo Hitt111rc:1 3it Thilllt girl : aJ3 P-tiblic ~ MCtiri1y J1B Card game ,ae flort- • cmoilfot--N'! ,.. ... '42 Atmost .c:J Awend: 2 _ .. "4o4 Alli~ ,.tion: ...... .~.'l, I ' ' ' """'"" O<Mc-,_. ,, .. ,. ..... 3 9usineu ,..... 4 Filbrie ·-bold • KrtOdt for _ 7 8 Oireclion: Abbr. 9 Hllf1.,.... 10 Bocome COIToded Tl AepeM 12 Vertlcflf _..,, 13 HarctyncMf -19 Destruction 2.e StonNlou&e 20 Aloct -,. "'*"" --30 "-Mor' 3 1 o..tro1 32 MuMilot Mikita """'- " n " 'i<; ·""~· ~ 34 Utter Mlnlptlf 35 Vaor8'1t 37 SIQD: Nwllc8I 38 Le_, In .i:e «<> Short• <11 MM'• '*"9 46Aultlft ... o....- •9 Length inl• 50 Mestiwortr lot .... 52 Ot: 2 W'Of'da 53 E__. ..... 55 ,Low_• 56 $pimlng '*•- 5 7 Apple paf1 ... _ 62 flltlllnlN ,..,. • "" ,__ ____ ___," .__ _____ ~ PEANUTS by Charles M. Schulz .---------. Gentlemen,! have just CXllllplettd my new noveL It is so good, I QJll not even going i;o send it to you. JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH YES, I KNOW! M.R. DRIVER 15 TRYING TO GET 'YO\J llOW ••• ex ... EXCUSE M.E! n.L TEl..L HW. YOU'RE HERE! ' • ~· . , ~ lAA, IF YOl.4 ~~JnOUSLY THINK VOU!t PAitENTS f'AVC>lt VOi.iF< ertoT~rt TO VOi.i, WMV t::l'.JN'T YOU ~rr DOWN -'/// l ~/ ! ! ! • DICK TRACY TNISCAAIS NOISELESS, TMl!Y HAVEN'T S&ENUS. WITH VOi.fit PAltENT!> AND Dl~CL.t~ IT WITH THEM? ' Why don'tyoujust c.ome and get it? by Harold Le Doux t CAN'T, MY Sll'OTMll.i< HA~ ALL THll. APPOINTMll.Nf~ BOOICll.P ..... by Mell by Chester Gould FLAT ON YOUR STQllW:.MS, ·FACE DOWN! THE GIRLS "My trouble II evn whea I'm In fte I lolk oat of It.!' DENNIS THE MENACE "" ..... . w • \IJHAT IX> ~ NEED N<W G!ASSES ral? 'l6u SEf. 100 MUCH Al.P.Mflf. ' 6'·>& r f 'Lively' at 90 PUBLIC NOTICE • ' Widow. Cleared In Heroin Case PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE ILP•llf SU,llllOR COUltT OP TM• ITATI 0, CALll'ORNIA POlt TMa COUNTY 01" OU.NOi Ne, A·nlU NOTICI OP N•AlllNQ OP PITtTION POiit P•OIAT• 01" WIL\. ANO flOllt 1.aTTl .. I TllTAM•NTAR'I' E'tl•ll of ANSON R. HAMNEll, Jll ., Ot>t"11C1. NOTICE' IS HeAEBY GIVIN fllll FlllST N"TIONAL BANK OP ORANGE COUNTY Ml lllld Mrtln t Ptttllan tor ProNll of Wiii end Io r L11t1ra TMIMlllllllfY l'l'llrtnc.1 N w II I c II 11 INdl tor turllltr ptrtlcul•r., If.Id 111111 "1M tlmt Incl pltcl of .... ring 1111 -1111 Dttn Mt fer Stpt. •· ttn, 11 tio:> t .m., In tllt covrtrcotr1 ol OIHrl· """'t NO, ) of llld COllrt. 11 700 Civic Cll'lltr l)rlYI Wnl, In lhl City of S.nl1 An•. C1ll10rnl1. 011«1 Auo. 17, 1973. PHILADELPHIA (AP) -A 91).year-<>ld widow who said ohe 11 friendly lo neighborhood children and drug men has been acquitted on chargers of peddling heroin. Frances Kelly, tried without a jury, was described by Com- mon Pleas Judge Donald Weiss Tuesday as ' ' th e liveliest 90-ytar-old I've ever .een." HE LEFT THE bench and helped Mrs. Kelly from the stand alter she testined, de- nying she ever sold drugs to anyone. Patrolman Herschel Van- diver said he arrested the widow June 9 near her home after she tried to run away, allegedly dropping t h r e e packets of a white pe>wder concea1ed inside a matchtx>o k. "He is not telling the truth,'' Mrs. Kelly told the judge. "I dropped nothing because I had nothing in my hands to drop." good relatlooshlp with children In the old n o rth e ast P h I ladelphia nelghborhopd known as Fbhtowu. As to drug users1 she said she befriended them, gave them food . "Mostly they llke lee tea," she added. Mullin Release Disputed SACRAMENTO IAPJ - Gov. Ronald . Reagan says the jury foreman in th e Herbert Mullin mass murder case was "uninformed " when he said Reagan was responsible along \Vilh Mullin for the 10 murders in Santa Cruz County. In an open letter after Mullins' conviction, ; u r y foreman Ken Springer said fi.1ullin had been admitted five WILLIAM a. IT JOHN, COlilnly Cllrk kALM•ACN, OtMARCO, ICNAl'I' 4 CHILLINQWOltTM Ill ... l'i.wtr St .. ............. c.tll ... 71 1U....,.11 A,i'twMYI tw1 1'11111-r Pllbllll>td OtanQI COii! D1ll't' Piiot, "i\lfUll n. 11. :It. 1973 2627·fl She added she Isn't spry enough to run from police, nor Is she able to attempt to climb over a fence as Vandiver testified . ASKED BY. 'l'HE judge if ( BRIEFS J she knew why she was in court Mrs. Keny·said: "They "---------' PUBUC NOTICE tell ~e I was a drug l)Usher." Weiss went on: "What is a drug puslK1r?" • ,,.1, ed _.._. nd tuP•••ott cou•t 0111 TM• "I've ask eve11vvwY a ''"'' o• c1oL.1Po•n111• floa I'm still waiting ror the THI COUNTY M 01.t.NOI "'•· "'''" answer." NOTICE OF HEAill lNO OF l"ETtTIOH , .. _. Kelly sa1·d she had • 1tJ1t l"fl.OBATE OF WILL AN 0 l"U~ H~OOfl.Al"HIC COOICIL ANO FOR LETTIERI TESTAMENTARY PUBUC NOTICE l.•1•11 of AllSEN M. THOMAS, o.u..------"· .I-~~~~~ NOTICE 15 HEREBY GIVEN flit! NOTICI TO ClllDfTOllS Al.ICE N. THOMA$ "'9 nltd ,,_.. .. n ~ N• A 1•Ut "41Kon for l"roMt• of Wiii -S rlor Court Of '"' Sl•ll of (alllg.rnl• Ho4oorasihlc Codicil .,Id lot luu1nc• ot fOI' ';: Countv of 0.•~111. un.... Tttt11'Mnllrt to !I'll Pllll'-E Ill of JUL IA FRANCES LEONAllO, ~4'1\CI to '!rlllcl'I It m.d• for lurllllr D«t .!.:, .,.rtklll.,., -!Mt '"' llm. Ind plec1 N!i~c. i, l'lll'•bY QIVll!'I to trtcl)tor1 of of hN'11'111 '"" i.a"" Ml M«I Mt tor ttll lbOVI n•int<I ct•tf<M"I INll 1tl s.til~ II, 1'131 11 t :DO 1.m .. 111 tflt Plf"IO!I• htvlno cl•l""t tQ1ln11 ttw ,.1c:1 c.ourtroon1 Of "-""*'' No. ~ of Mtd cttftdent •r• rlQV1rt4 to flit lt>tm, wllll COl,lf'I, 11 1'0 (]\fie Citnllr Ori~ Wttl, In 1111 l\Ktl....V \fOVdle<'I, hi !111 otflc. of ttlf City ol IWI An1, C.111•111•, llll Cltrk ot n... .tioVI .ritllled courl, Of 0.11111 A""'1!1 JO. 1'7) 10 Pf'IJfffll 11\et!\ wlll'I 1i. f'llCllflrv WILLIAM I . ST JOHN, vou<Mrt to 1111 undfrMontd If Tiii otflct County Cltrll ot llOBEllT V W"SSON, WASSON, & •UlllCI. WILl.IAlro!.S a SOlllNllN OLSEN 2331• CrtntlllW Bllld .• TOl'Tlnte. .. s.wttl Otl•I It., S ..... I• CA '°501 wl\lcll It 1111 pl1et ot bulll\IU of LM A"'""" C1lll. toOlt Ille ul'lcllrtlQned In 111 "'lltttt 09rt1lnl"9 Ttb ~tll) ..,.,,, 10 Tiii ""'' ol wrct c!IC:edtnl, within tovr "n-FI !«1 fffltiolllr montlli •l"'r Tiii llnil puDUt1ll011 of ttll• Publli.hed Or•/lfl CO.SI Dilly Piiot. no!lt• A\lfllll n. n.. "' un • 2w.n 0,,-. AlfO\lll ,, 1tn CH,.llll£S E. LEONAllO EitKutOI' of II• Wiii PUBUC NOTICE "' 1114 O.C:tod~"'· IUPt•IO• COUlllT 0' THI llOltlT V. WASSON ITATI OP CALl,ORNIA f'Olll WASSON & OLSl.N T"t COUWTY OP OllANOI m11 Cl"lfllMw •l....S. fllO. A1'1US Torr•-CA ftill!S ffQTICI. OP IA.Lt OP tlAL PllO'· """'°"''' fir t1.~11!1( ••rt av ADMOtltT•ATOt AT PuDll1htcl Or•MH ('oe11 0111'>' Pllot. P•IVATI'. SALi AUOufl t , lS, 2', '9, 1'71 2oiSJ·7' In tlMI mtlttt' Of tlll atilt of Jll!!NNU! PUBLIC NOTICE VINCENZA TEOi KO. O.C11Mct. Nol'ttl 11 lltl"lfl1 tl\1111 rhll, ALlll!!llT ---=~-=-~===-::::c--TEOESCO 1nct L£0N,_.O TEOi$CO. c~ NOTICt OP INTIN'TION TO 9df1'111'111lr1tort QI tM ttt1t1 of Jl"NN ti DIDICATI IAllMINT VINCENZA T£0E$CO . .-.1ttct. will Mii NOTICE IS HE•&B'I' GIVEN Tlltt Oft 11 ,,. ....... 11, lo fM l'llf'lnl lllld tlll tltll Tiii tth dlY 01 AUOUSI, lt7l, lhl IOI~ of bhld.,, uncter the '"'"' •net eoftctlflOll\ Ectut•tlOft of the lr~IM Unlf\ld SC:llool ...... Mn.,.. rMntfOllld, lllcl iWblKI to Oblr'lcl ot Or•"'9 County, C11!fol'fl\1, eonfln111Kon lloV 1111 SllP9f"!or ..:Olilrt. on/or "90Ptld • ResolUllon of lntlnllon to 1ftw """""'"" 20, ltn. II llw t.11' ol ct"'!talt 11'1 u...,,....t lo $0UThtr"n t :lf 1.m .. or ttier.-n., -.ltPlln tlMI lllM Cillfortll• £4ltorl ~l'IY· , MO!k uTlll· ,,._.., Irr ltw, 11 till ottltt ot ROlll!!llT IV corl'IOl'•non. for unc11rorouN llectrk II. WYAT'r, ATIORNEY tor .. Id to.ct ltin9"11illOll UM purpO\H lo MrYt lhl fT'!lnltff'•tor'I· •I 10'1U LO. "llrnllfll a1'1d., tollofOt Ptrk E1ern1nt1ry Scllool, Hid LOI Al•mltOI, C1lllotl'll1, 111 Ille rlOfll, II· .. -tnl to:. DI loc1!ICI OYtr• llnd., Ind ti•, "''-'· ~ •l•T• QI lhl CllCMlold. •cf'Oll poir'llon1 of tl\al talcl J)l rctl ot 1111(1 tnd •ti ttMi rlfllt, llfl1, lttlll'tlf, •nd "'•It lol:•ll<I •I CM.,.rrtl ind Flr ln thl Cltv tNI I"" nt1te cf JENNIE VINCENZA ot trvlM. TEDESCO. detlllld. llfl ~rM ll'Y' A }IWflc .-!lfll Vp011 t&I Qlltlllon of OP9f'lllon cf llW OI' otlllrwt"' otlltr 111111 m•k1no wtl'I dldlc1!lan wltl DI htld 11 "" or 111 MdlllOfl ti), !Nol cf Hid clfitl•f'd. •I El TCll"O Mlrlfll 5tl'l<>OI MUll\putpott lflt flfl'll ot Pllf ctfffl'I, 111 -to •11 t1'11t It~. lrvll>f, C1lllornl1. on lhl 1111'1 cttv Cll'llll'I r11t Pf'OC)t'l1y, litualld I""" City OI S..pternMr, 1m ., "" hour Of 7::t0 ol' ...,..1111m, C-ty °' Or111t1" se.-. cf o'clock (p.m,J. C•lllor'nle, clMcflllld 11 lf)!lowt: IOAllO OF EOUCATION "LOI I tf Tttcl :Jl»S. II Pl" MIP tllVINI! UNIFIEO rl(Orftd I• IOOk n. l"IDW 17 to 11 of SCHOOL p1$TltlCT Mlpt l'ICClltOH.11'1 Orll'IDI County." ly A. St•nlev Cot•Y l\llllkt lo; (l,lrr""t llllff, COY-nll. 5"r"'•l"f of thl con41tlon. . rtllrv•llon, rlOM cf WI'>', aotl'd or Ectuc:itlOft MIMmtfllt. itnCI •~l1t1no ll'IC\lfflibt•nc" of Pvbll•hld Ot•not CN•I D•ll't' Piiot, r«J::·renn, •• con<flllont "' ,.,. ,,... Auoint ,., im M ·n (.llh 111.ln'fUI montY cf "'9 .Ul'llflll IP-flf A~ or otl'ltr COl'llrlC'I l«fn, Tlfl PUBUC NOTICE ""''"" Of ,.. I""""' ~d to ~ ti. ofttr 11'1d 1t11 bllllflCI to bl P'l4 on·l----,-, .. -,T-,-0-0-,-.-,-,-,-0-.,-,--• ~f111Nllon ol wl• bY' 11'>1 Collrl. Ttnt 1nd ,.......,1u""' on ln1ur11'1(;1 tcCIPllble ,lo NAM• STATl!M•NT pyrcfttwr tMn bl ptld bY bWW 11 Of 1119 T"' loltowlng Plf'W'I 11 ctolng bullntU dill of ¢0flflrll'lltlon of tale. Tiit ta· 11: LITTLE KORNElt OF HAW"ll 1'ff :::c.tifJn ~ .~!"iu1~"'1~"!'nc: pol~ F1lrvl9W 'tel., Cotta Mtt•. C•llt. f2.u tMll DP. •I ttMi ._.. .. of tf11 purcl\alllr, Lllllt ti:omer ol H1w1n, lllC .. All .Allif• •net oHirt l'l'\Otl bl '" WF!fl"I • C.Uklml• Coroor•tl<>tl 111d will bt l"ICllYld 11 fht o1ftct o1 Tl'llt b\AIMA It C<>tldlil<:tff by I tOf'POI'• 11to•l!lll1' •. WYATT, tom LOI A••mlt" •flon. Lllll•' Korner of H1w1/I llYd., Loi AIM>!IM, C1HIOl"l'lll, •llomlY ~ck IC111"lh1r1 tor .. Id ldr!lln!•lr•tor• •I lrlY tlm. '"'' Pt'tt.ldfnl "" fl,.t pW!k1tlon of thl• ll9ff<11 Pel Thi• 1111...,..,, w.11 flttd wllll fllt C1111n· blfor• '"' m.klno ot .. 1<1 ••1•· IY c11rk 01 Or•r11• CounlY or1 A1111utt '· FOi' further lllfomo•11ott Ind 1114 font'lll ltn. """" •• IN otflct of .. ,d .lllOl"M'f' lor ttll l'1nff Hml""""''°"" PUDllll'lld Or•l'IDI ,_, O•llv Piiot enT':ct~'.'"' 11 !'IMl'V«I to !'tlld •nv IMld AllOufl •· 1s, 22. 2f, 1973 241.n PUBLIC NOTICE 01llCI! Auou1t 2), 1'1'. $/Albert Don.Id Ttcln<:I) Admlnlltr1IC1t tlLton1rd Tldlltt • ,,CTITIOUS aU51 Nl!$1 .t,dml11l~t-•f~• HAMa nATIMINT tllOSllltT •·WYATT, •tlttMY W Thi lotlow'!119 '71f"M>M 1r1 clolt19 rile Adl"lll11lttr•ton 1W1lnt11 •t : 117N t.-. AllftllfM 11.... NO EXIT (AfE, $167• P•tUIC CO.Ill "'" AllMit .... ''"'ornl• Hl111w••· Sol.Ith L1gvn1, c1n1om11 Pllllll.tlld Ot'•ntl Coett 01\ly Piiot. •oo.rt H B1!11, 1131 Ocll" W•'t'· Allf, 2t, JD Pct $1pl, 3, lt7J 2"1·7' U011111 BtlCll. C1. PUBLIC NOTICE Jottrl Tl'ndan, INI 0c .. 11 w ..... Wa1111• Bttch, C1. Tl'lf• butlntft 11 eondvcl«I by • Qlftll'l1 p1rtntr1h1p. NOTIC'I TO r•tDITOllS John Ttn<l•ll IUl'a•IOllt COUllT 0 .. TMI Tl'lll lllllmtl'll w11 flltd wllll !hi COUfl. ITATa 01' CA\.ll'OAl'IA flOa ty Chlrk of Or.lntt COltlll't' Oii AUOUSt '· E1t1t!"':. c~mHOfl L~r:.~,, •Ito ltn. PmM kM'irfl· .. JOSIPH t.EO TINT!, Otctlttct. aA•AY T. SIMONS ' NOTICE IS HfltEBV 01Vl!N 10 lh• NI C»IMl'/'N [crldllOl"t of llMI I DO\le "'"*' ftctcllfll L'l\11'11 •Mell, Cl, 111111 •II WWJS h&vln1 cl1!m1 'fl•ln~I lllf T1ll1 C1141 "7•17tt •u ld ~ 1r1 rtQVlrlcl lo fli. !Mm, PuDlllhld Ot•"lll (OU! 01lly PUof, j wlfll "" nKttl•"' vriuchltt. Jn 111t otnc1 A11tui1 1. u. n. 21. 1973 uo.n l of ffll ell!'\ of Tiii •~• tntlllld cwrt, or:1::::::..:::..:::..:::..::c..c;.;---,,,::---'-'--C '>to prltflll 11\tm, wl\l'I lllt MCllMI N PUBLIC NOTICE ~voucllln, to Tiii llndffllll'lld 11 '1t E11t ---~-~~===---­'11th SlrMI. Cost• MtM. C11ll'Ol'nl1, Wl\lch ·-',. "" pltcl of butlntft ot "" unc11r1!1111d PICTITIOUS IUllNtll :in ... """"'' Pl!'fll"t"' to "" fftlll Of NAM• ITATIMINT ,ulcl cllctd>lrlt. •11•11111n tovr lf!Ol'lll'I• lfltr TM foUllWlnt ptn011 11 ctolnt IWtlfltll times to state men ta I hospitals, but was released as a result of an "economy move" by the Reagan ad- ministration. Asked to comment on the Springer letter in his news conference Tuesday, Reagan said Mullin's release from state hospital was • ' a psychiatric error," not an ad· ministrativ e error. e ln•anlt11 Bid TORRANCE (AP ) -An in· nocent plea by reason of in- sanity has been made by William Ray Bonner, 25. ac· cused of the Easter Sunday shootings that left seven·dead, including his fiance and a personal friend . Superior O>urt J u d g e Bernard Lawler ordered a psychiatric examination Tues- day aDd set Nov. 11 for trial. e 6ullt11 Plea. SAN DIEGO (AP) -A federal judge has set sen· tencing Oct. 1 for two fonner SmaD BU!i.ness Administration officials who pleaded guilty to trying to arrange kickbacks on $700.000 In SBA Joarui. William Pellow, a former SBA attorney in San Diego, and Robert L. Mallette. an ex- Ion officer, entered their pleas Tuesday before U.S. District Court Judge Leland C . Nielsen. e Bill Bae!keel SACRAMENTO (AP) -A key Senate committee has air proved a consumer protection program, but not until com· mittee members whacked its original $2.5 mi 11 i on air propriation down to $ I . 8 million. Assembly Speaker B o b Moretti (D-Van Nuys). told the Senate Judiciary Com- mittee Tuesday prosecutors are too busy with their "heavy criminal load -crimes of violence" to adequately handle consumer cases. To aid consumer fraud pros- ecutions, Moretti's bill would create a California Conswner Action Network. e Sign Curl>• SAN DIEGO (AP) -A con· troversial sign ordinance con· trolling billboards and other off·premises business signs in unincorporated areas has been adopted by county supervisors after a two-year batUe. The ordlnance, was adopted 4-0 Tuesday. Jim Sample, vice president of community relations for Pacific Outdoor Advertising Co.. lold the board that the ordinance would f o r c e removal of 116 of 199 signs in the county owned by his com· pany and by Foster-KaJser. l IM tlrtl puDlle•llOll ot tl'ltt lloflet. •1: Ott«! A\lllUll 2, nn DANA POINT OltUOI. U661 L•., __________ , ___ _ v.-afftrlct Grltfl Tllllt 1"1111, 01n1 Point, Cellfornl• tUl't I· l11Klltrl1t of 1111 l 1t1t• J.11T11I ,hllllp VIKO. 401 Colull'lbut ,,; '"' •WW n•ll*I dlctdll)I -Clrclt, CorOl'I~ ~· M•'· C•llfOl'Tll• tull P~UL A. HANNA Tl'lt1 b!ltlllfft It coM\ldlCI by 1n In. l 1'""""7 II \.IW cllYldll•I. ""'°' LIW 1'4MI.. Jtrntl l'ltll flp VlKI ~ ~lf lltt 11tl'I llrMf Tt\11 tl•ltmlfll Wiii l!led wllll ti. Coui.-' c.t. Mita. C•N..,,... '2ll7 t't' Clerk of Ort"OI County en Aueu1t •· T•1 tncJ •1M • '4M10 1m. A-., tw 1nntr111 Pm., ~ulllllllflt ~lnot Coltl O.lly ,Hot. ..\lbl11htd OrtllOt Cott1 Olll'f Piiot, Aut11•1 L '" n. !• 1rn uu.n Auowt a, 1s. tt. tt. 1m , .. ,.,, : ' PUBLiC N011CI PUBLIC NOTICE • More Evils Of Drink BUENOS AIRES (AP) -Emboldened by drink and the urgings of frlC}lds, Ramon Ellzon.<0, 18, reached through the bars of a circus cage to pet a tiger. The alarn1ed b e a a t sprang around and sank hi! lccth into Ellrondo's right arm. Surgeons bad to remove lhe arm. -.. .~ ' . . ' ' DAILY PILOT ¥._ OVER THE COUNTE& . I '·' ' I NASO Ll1tlng1 for Tueoday, A119.,.t 28, 1973 ' , ____ ....:.--------~. Thi-" QuOtl!lon ..-1i1iltr H 111'1 I)' .. l'ufo C~ l\'t ~ •ul)Q CF4 1~ ,.~ WPOlllCI ·~ IM N•· Fllllll &II' ~!,:. ~-' • im r1uy rp ,,_ :,M1¢1•rlon ot tilbttll 21• ! ~ u1kr II 191'\ • .. mH!I 9Ml.li 111' "'~ t Pellll'•· •rllnlt 1 "' ll'etl 111~ 11 11vlot W ,;: .r.. • •!'Id otftft Ill L~ VI ,,.,,. 0 ,. !"' •tllCITI • I Ql,IOt OV C'llt·lh• kO 0 ~V. Rl'fC"' , I» 21 f\!!!11'f .-l~ 1~ cou~ttr d11i.rt r~ n Au 111'1,,,"°" '!~ lf\'11 lf1~" -)ii ~riie Oll'lor re:..~,. <.>/I ~~ 'h V'li 111 P~ 1~ 1i~ 1:f, Mf f"' "~l' tlmt.J T"' Q~I,f; ~ M.o \oo g 11::fl'e1~ l7 11VJ Tr" ~IP I~ ll ' . t1o:;,,I ~.~P~!IC~i)'i t .:::. 'tt ')1_. 1.~ At Un• \St: 16'11 l'~°'rn 11¥1 IS~• etow11 or cpmm AY Adv it ,.,,_Ru Pll• 1 ~ u'I (II o• t i •1«11 •"4 llO nol HICl'I /,' j!~ :It lleyn &It ~ )I Un C~ t 9 ~ ' r111re•111 tc11i11I H1hn w llV. ::;~ ~: ~" d u~'°'1 $Pl X16tt 11\~ tr•nt1ellpnl. Hi ll lk 4 • l•h flotVt DU. 1'1'1 !610i UMl'I Th l'IJ$,O T"''r." ~:ri!~ ~ )tt 3j., ::::!~· c~ ~I~ It~ r?s ~~ "'l •$ · Au111n1 , lffl t!,•~PI,,' ,', 1,,. ~t AOwt Fnt t.\li 10\.li Univ M°"d1 1• · " 111 M ;"' lt:uc•r Pll 17\'t lt Unv • '. ••gu11•1ALS Ht llo s 1!~ .~ Aull Stc.v 111'1 ltl'I V.1QM H ... o "', ,, • AN UTI LITEI HlllCtl c , ........ 5101 Acts jY• "'V1nc1 '' Bl~ A1k Homwct 211,:o Zl.,_ Stl•ln Cp .... tlh V•n ·~· '°!tt-},'1• •111111111 20 21\.li ~(IOYlt I 11 \11 121 .• S•m1nlt 16l\ 17 \fin • k "J SECOND GENERATION -The Mustan g II is 19 inches shorter than the 1973 model and se ven inches shorter than the original Mustang introd uced in 1964. Stand ard equipment on Mustang II incl udes front manual disc brakes. four· speed manual transmission, bucket seats, cut-pile carpeting and a 2.3·1iter four cylinder engine. A f.• Alx l~~ if" H~~f1 't Q 11V• jjt• sct1tr1r l0\'1 31\IJ l/lclorl t ti'"' ... lfO l"ct 2''• ,.!~ H'f•llr ' 20\• ,, ~CllC>ll In 2•Vt 27\lt VldllO SYI 1· A eQ IV I I w ,, •• 11'4 Scott tl'ln I "' Vltull SC !!:~~ 1: :~ l 1::3: N~I 21V: '8'.io ScotltL G ~ 1\4 ~o1111S":'o \ ·~ Am A111s1 f11. tV. 1nlor1x •* 714 ~crloa Mp 11'/o 11\to 1 A Ar!(r!I j'tlo )1' ln101•~ ,,,_ 11• nc,lplO I l'h I~ W11l1 Mt 1 .-AmEI LD 2\.\ Intl C,o SI 59111 ~ Wrld n•;. 21 W••l'l'lll I . ~~ ~r~ tr~ rtl! :~,,~f ~~ 1~i: 1n~ '~ml~cn it~ ~~ ~=.:· : Am F11rn 1111 1\'7 In Al11m •U S\lf seven Uo 30 »!lo W1JQf Wt 11 • "m Grtt «~ •Sl'J Jn BkW A m ~'I; Sh1llr C11 l"° 2\'I WtllllG M0 I~~).• AM!rc Sv lR\'o 19~ ln!rll to I I '-• \l\CrlW 4 •VJ W1tc1t P .,.....+• "' Am Ttl•v 1S 16 lrel•nCS R <'I Slmp11>n 11 lt W1tPub n 1,\/0 l~\ Am Well! 10''111V.Jl!'1'11Sb 1 11 Sn1 Tool1 ,.\.', $9\.':t W-', Ir Fll0 1110~,1~;•1' Ford Pushes 'Small' An,...u1r .O"I •1 Vt Jet AlrFr 341 • !Ind Pip \•VJ! 1S W ll•ml •• ·, Anktn 111 •11 •Vl Jo1lvn M 16''• 11 oectr1 •'4 ltV:> Wl!sn M J l•Vi 17'• APf•tO ;~ 10'~ 1(1! .. r SI 1JV, 13~1 Slenedy 1 lf" lt\li Wini PkT l•Vi 1~ ,t.PS lnc;i h•~ 11111 K1lv1r C J~ l~1 S!cl 1t~15 1•Vt lSl't Wlte PLI 1·~ 19 ','.',!!... Mv,t ~'1 11 K1.1rn Tk •t·, !\/• S!k N Alt 2"4 J7¥. Wl)C>cl L!l'I 1411• U'4 , "" H lS\11 16'0 KellwCP<I 11•'.i.:O 1 Vo <;!kN Brw t I ' WOl'ld Sv 1314 1• Arvldl &:1 t•.i. Kin bO!ln 10\< \\\, \leak N $ 7'4 IV.. ~l)(l'IX Co 114 9\'o ~~7°G~c.~ l~11o l~ ... ~~i .. ·:~ i~~ 1\':J. ~~"'o'er T~ 1rn 1:'°' z:if, Fe'! •l~ 4~ :~l~ct l~~ :;:. !:: ~~II cr,:11 l~'I 1r;~ Sv~tr CD JIV.. 11• il(llll Utn 2'2\\ 14 81trd Wr 16'1< l6'4 KMS lrKI J\~ 31,,f-------.,------ Firm Sees Big Year A11.ea.d for Little Car 8.1k11r F1 ).!•,, 36 Knipe VI lJ JS JO M , A. ti lleldwn l 91;< 9~• K111er Pr 1Ul 22!/a OSt· f! . .,e 611llv MO 51 S. KrlllQlt l'h 9 lln~ Blclo't :.IS l$V1 Ku~tm El 6l,i 7\'1,(---------=-,,--llank Rel ?lVt 14 Ladct Pet 7'1• 71~ NEW YO RI( IUPll -Thi 10 moit Bornes H ll\4 241h LantlJI 11)'11. 11 ~1 acliv• sloe~• trldtct on 1111 OT~ ll)trkel By CARL CARSTENSEN Of 1111 Dilly Pilot Sl1fl CORONADO -Mustang IL Ford's new small luxury car should power Ford Division to a sales record in the 1974 model year, Bennett E . Bidwell. Ford vice president and divis ion general manager, said here Tuesday. Ford Division will sell 2.2 million cars and one million trucks in the 1973 model year and wilt better those marks in the coming year, Bidwen predicted. IN INTRODUCING the new models, Bidwell fo recast that his dealers would sell one million small cars "which is more than anyone else has ever sold in the past or will sell in 1974." The retail price for Mustang * FINANCE II will be wider $3,000, Bidwell said. "~1ustang IL is anot her fi rst for Ford , a forerunner of a Statidard Gear? 'Debut' in 197 4 DETROIT (APl -Steel· belted, radial-ply t ires wilJ make · their first large- scale appearance on the new American car lin es this year, five percent -compared with only four million ove r the past year. HE SAID Ford. the nation's second largest au tomaker, ex- pects two of every three ~ars it sells to include radial tires. They will be standard on 37 of Ford1s 68 domestic models, in- cluding the largest and most expens ive ones, and will be op- tional on all other models. Long dominant on European highways, the radials were virtually unknown to the average U.S. car buyer until just a few years ago. But a major effort by the top domestic auto and tire firms has made thei r widespread in- clusion possible on 1974 model Only 25 percent of the fir m's cars. 1973 models rolled off the The radials have been wide-assembly lines with radials, Jy touted as Jong.wearing, MacDonald said . virtually puncture-proof and General Motors says it will capable o( providing a much offer the steel-belted radials smoother ride. "in significant quantities" in fe d er a 1 1974. GM introduced radials on A N D T H E som e 1973 models. Environmental Protection Chrysler is offering radial Agency says th ey also will as optional equipment on all mean a gasolin e savings of models in 1974. During the about 10 percent. 1973 model run, th ey were sold The automakers are ex· only on some models. peeling Americans to jum p a.t American Motors says it radial options and at models plans to conti nue s e I I i n g wi th radial tires as standard radials as optional equipment equipment when the 1974 cars this year. go on .sale next month.. _ ---· _ . Ford Motor CQ. predicted PRICES FOR the raaia1 op- Monday that almost half of lion have been in the $90 range Detroit's estimated 1974 model for five tires in the past, but production run of 12 million some increases are possibl e cars will roll oft the assembly this year. lines equi pped with steel-Purchased separately, ra· belted radials. dials are selling for $50 and Harold MacDonald, Ford's up each . However, the 1nakers vice president for product say the radials will not development. said the five perform well on older cars major U.S tire firms will pro-that have not had their duce about 22 million radial su.spe.nsion systems adjusted tires for th e 1974 model run -· properly. 3•ste" F ·~u 1~~ Lli\CI 26\~ 2714 f\leJ<ll Y IS sbl>l>llld by NII.SO. 't:I new kind of car. The company 8!~11~: F 41~ 4\o L1wt1r c "i., 37 s1oc• v11urn. 11•A1kMCl'IQ. h th I t'" ·11· · Bek.In CP j lll "'° L•rv Boy :ni,:. 1''1• P•nn Liii 15-t.400 ~ ~ • as more an oo mt ion in eenuv Ls :i 26 Lt011r1 Pl u '4 ''""' Oek•lD Re• 19,000 ,9v. 50' ·• product inves tment and we :::: (;bet M». !8v. tir"~'lmp M l¥t ~~ 1orcrEw. 12,.00 '"" 1.. ' th. k 't ·11 h th Bltlb Co ,.,., ! Linc 8ctsl •Vt 6"I Fo!oMll 78,IQO '"' ,a.._ I 1n l WI ave C same Ille Orm 11~• 12',0, Lion CIS1 JV. J>,;, Am Ew.p 6',&00 ,S'l'.to ~ kind of impact on the auto in-Bl•ct sans 1•1,. 1s1~ Loctite 53 st tomb Jns Am s.t.soo 12\1:1 12w+..,.u Bob E~n• 18'< 9V. Loewi Cc. SS ~I,/) M1nufacl liancv 47,500 ).f 3! ..... .,_'I' dust1·y that the or j g i n a I Boolh No 19'/:i lOV~ Mact Gai 1>'4 1•'4 Purnup Simi 44,600 261~ 26'4+ . , ,, . Elrento I 'll\!. ?2'4 M11 RllV 5 SIJ. P1lto OU J.1,SQO ~ 21~1:\ • Mustang did ID 1964, Bidwell Br1n1:s In 1ov. 11Vi M• 1c1t1 •2lit 4'.Polo Bonk.Amir 33.i'llO ~ 611<+ • 'd Brown A.r S'h 6V• Marl! Fri 1•'4 16'41, ·~ • Sal , Bucklle 15 15\lt Marv Ky :nVi 3ll'I NASO Volumt Tcct•y, (,)22MQ . ~-t • ll11ckev S:!o 6'.~ MC Cmck ..CVt (l'h AclVllllCI>$ ''' Vnch-111Qtd '. ,, Ford Division's small cars Ru•nP s1 16 .• 26i. McQuat ,,..., 1s•r. oec:Hnt• 4112 Toi11 · , Buller M 45'1> ·16"'1 l" o -Pinto Maverick and cam Tag 20'll 211. Mt'llcm 1 • ' , ' ra~l sow s ~'h MtOltrn 5511:1 56'h , rv1ustang -will reach 900.000 cen v1Ps u:i, ,,~. Merid •n '1~ s•,, Gai11er• & Loserw1 .. ·. ChmP Pl h '4 !5 MeYer Fr 1~. 17~ 'rl sales in the 1973 model year c11"nc1 ... 11v. 11"" m1u1ocr oi&Vt •~\, , . ed · Chanl Co 5\' 6 Mols Ga1 21~ 22''1 Ntw York (UPI ) -Tiii fQllowlf'HJ n ' and are pro1ect to hit one thein Cp 31'h 32¥.i Min" Fab t. 6\l 1hc.w• tht ttock1 11111 Ni.,. 11111>10 1 ·11· · 1974 · f II Cl'll Br Ir 86V• 1'1 '< Moout tp !O 21 moil •net tost tho IT'ICISI l>IMG on r ' nu ion 1n , a gam O Chrf1 Ste 147 157 Moleit 1n 34\/t J~Vt 01 cllll110• en tM OYfr.t"' Percent Cllli V A 31\« ~Moore Sa 2f 21'4 market as Quoit<! by !hi NASO · Clevelik 9~> IO•r. Morrlsn 19'h 21 Net and percenT&oe chanptl: are 1 Clow Crp 9'1~ 10 Motor Ct 91• tl'I dlfftrenco betwten Tll• PftVI CM" IHI 11.••' IN ORDER TO support this ~~f s~~ ~:~ 2~ ~~1 c~~~ :1.1o ;}2 price ancl !hi cure•"' 1111 bkl jffti"W • sales go~l,. For~ has inves~ed ~~;fiT1\ ; fl:Z l!l.1. ~;' MLJ?i~ 1~~ 1~\'. 1 Whltntv Flu•~IMl!~~+·2v. ui\.'Ji.o $250 m1lhon 1n expandi ng ~~~~"'co ~~ flV. Nt Patent lO'h 1w11 2 M•l11Llne F111 3¥.+ ~ VP· :15.o II od . . Crutch R • I'!\ Ntedll"" ' 10 3 Mlg Trust WtS ·~+ Y1 Up !!J' sma car pr uct1on capacity. cu rt Noll 1s1,1, 1611. NewU co ,..., 10\li 'Pacu&so Bret 1 v.+ l't. Uo . . . Oanl !nlf :a.IV. 3.ol!o\ NEno GE 15'4 161/i. 5 llld Cf)!" $Ir• 1'4+ '~ Vp 16. Add1tJonal production of oanlv M a &'h NJ Nat G 15'h 16 , Mark tVHom• J>.11+ v. Up 11.'4 Mustang It in Cali fornia 0:~! ~~ ~ 8 ~:~r~::i 1; ~~ J~i! ~ W"::~1~k .ft. lv.t ~ tl; ~;I Should enable Ford dealers to 8a11 Grn ~ •E N1111ttr1 B " 32'h ' l(enl'ldy co111n 10'4+ l •i. Up n . 8ecl1 Oa 17\'J l Nordslr 20\4 ~ !O Mlnn•f"kl LD 3'1•+ ~ Vp ll make 350 000 sales in the 1974 11eor In •V. \II Nws NtG 9•-91\ 11 com rel'I com •~+ 14 vo n • • Dflklb AR d 'f• SO>,:. Na•.il Cp •1'h (9 I? H1Um1rk Grp 2\lo+ V. Up 11 model year or mor~ th~n dou· B:l~~e1nt1 3U't 36~ ~~i:O ~e }:z l 13 Lltco N0Y ··""•• "•~++ '!;' Up 111· ble the 128 000 dehver1es ex-OIGm crs 12v. 124'o le 0r s.-ss u,Prof111 .. '" Up 11' ; ' Ol1m HO 10ol't 10~ ~e•n £ 7 f'I' lS Tita n Group l v.+ \'o VP 11 , peeled during 1973. Oltk A B 24~ UV:. Oc~;~ M~ 3V. 3~ 16 USF '"""o'1' l"'t ~ VP 11 • OIV'5 Sci 914 lOV. Oflsh Lqs IVJ ·~ 1' Ai90rt• I I " ,.,, VP 10~ Bidwell was optimistic about Doc111e1 '9V.. 30 0411v.,. M 19 20'h 11 Hc.usr>aSn G• :w.+ 14 UP 10 Dollr Gen ~ W. Oii F .:. 7 N It Plnthur11 Cp 1'MI+ .V. Up 10 the prospects for Thunderbird Oonelcts 2'~" ~ OIDt ~~. 15,,.. 16...., io Mlll\¥$1\Dltt A ,,,.,+ "' VP 9 • Oc.w J1>ns 29',io 30 21 Nc.EurOll .10b 7l>I>+ ·~ Up and the Torino which has new gov1k~I os ·~~ 1Ji,_; ~~~ ~~ 6v, 21 Bonini• Inter 7'11+ " up a : front and rear styling for 1974. e~::O nLaD ,, ol'l!h overt NA • '"'" LOSl!RS ~I Pase. ll"i 12 Ozltr Crp t1'4 "' 1 Btltlk COl'P Sl'l-I 011 J,"'. Sales of standard and larger E~.r~~cet, f.t ~ ::~~~,Br ~:l ~~ ~ rum~~•tc~lf 11~ 1~ &:: / segment cars including the EQu sa.t. 1'"" 13 Pa~ Garn 21 ~~ 21~ ' "'"'Ari• cr111 n.-~ 011 11 · full size F~rd wilJ b e !~~ ti 23 ;11o 1k·. ~:So L~~ 'm ~~ : 51~,':,r;;,1c~~ ~.,,.._ ~ ~-1 • -1 EZ Paint 6 1 P&n OcOI 15~ 16 -· determmed largely by market Fel• Lne 7lii •1., Paul Rev 1•v. ''"' ' 1n1or1Jr lllCOrl> ~ "' ou 10.0 . . Firlort El 3'V. 33"'1 Paulev p 3v, 3\li I lnOarY Qufffl 4\h-1111 i 10.0 trends next year1 Bidwell said. Farm er 11v. 12v. ovtss c11 111sv, 1.iv, 9 Lon11Mmpa 2..,,_ '4, t.1 F•v1 Oro 6 1 p N s 14v. 14't 10 Com!lllSlll'IO 1~ V. > 8.3 flnQrlll 12VJ 1~''• Pav y n F1i1nkSllld ,0$!) •v.-~ 0 11 l .l "THE TREND towards Fit BC$1n 11 11•.~ p:iGs~&~ ~~ ~ 12 Indus! FUllCP 8-~ 011 1.1 II ha •--'d t · lll T~FI" 21~ 22V.. P.ot l • I •\lo I) Fctomtl C.,. ••4--\\ ()tti<-sma cars s uci::n ev1 en .m i11 w.iF 1~ "" .,1e~0 s.~ , 1 '' wooc1Loth i.11 1•v.-1v. Oft-- the market for a long time but ~1~0T~1':.i l~~ 11~ :='rn w ~~ l~~ ll &'i~~~n fm~ !"'::· ~ ~ the recent sharp spurt is ~~~~{ 01 1~ 11i! .,,...,., 1M 1nto ,," 11 H•rdW'c•Cc. in 6 -v. Ott . . Frink El I~ 9;\ Pt~.-d Mk 11 1"4 1t Cklw Cor_p M f14-Vo ~ mostly attributable to What Franztl ?~'Vs 211\ 1>-11 ltrll 5 19 T'1tnte(I OflSll ~ 411 ! I h be din d Frleftd 1e 23'11 2~'1• "'•nf Goff '"" ?I<! 20 fil)llM of Knit 2V.-111 ' peop e ave en rea g an FrlJCll R 11 12 ... ....,,,., 1~"' 1Av.11 N8tM1nesv1 .«i ,,,.,_ ~ !.I hearing about the gasoline Frei FdE "'1 m PSN C•r 1w. tm :u Sheller CD Am 1,._,.~ •• shortage,'' he said. "By and .,.. 5 · · ' ·,; s~ large, the shortage has not srrmn !** a ~-!!!! • y be<n as severe as feared. MU. TUAL ·FUNDS' '·' ".; Perhaps, soon people will . . · • •·; emerge from a period o( in· -i., itial reaction and return to trend buying patterns. New York -Fol· EIQ!t Gr •.11 7.s.'.I Joti"•tft 23.tl 23.ll sm1111r u1 2 "If th at happens 'he market lt)W]l'lll ls I llsl O)f !ATON .. KEYSTONl i Scliu1 Fct ·~ , • . Did •nd ii.Md Drl· HOWARO: Cini Bl 11.13 lf..59 Sc/wt Sp f; for full sized cars will be i~lllh :': Q\IOt-'~1£1~ !'.J:l.. F$ ,;:~ li~ ~~i :~ 1::fl 2t:1 '"':r~n~" 1~.~~~ okay." the NASO Inc. ~.~r F .~t.lt,:fi ~~:: ~~ t.: !:R ~~llC M-.Z l~·il TVISll•Y tck Fct t.ff l '04 Cult SI tt.'6 2,,50 SPIC•! 21.13 28:&3 A\I011tt 21. 1t13 ~S'ii'1o b:·01 ~·01 cust S2 11.U 12.31 Dd L~ •.JD 4.11 ' ' Cull S3 7,79 l .J.l 5ICU•1TY 'DS: D S&L ' 114 .... 1..-C MGMT Qltl't Cu1t S4 •.11 4.51 Eoufty 3.3' 3.61 OWl·ey ADMIRALTY! l!QIV Gr . 1.~ ·~ Apollo:. •. 59 5.03 l11uest ,.., 7.05 " •~" '·" u ::.~ ,/;:; 1:,1 !''j! PoOon U3 '"' "'"' ' 'in" llleom j·" !.ts tt'91 Gt 'l:IO l ' S Knlckr S." '-51 SILllCTIO l"sur11 ·ll .J.l lflll'I Trt \ '02 ' Kn kr' Gtft 7,:ld ?,f, An'! Stll' I 1 • AclY(Slf J •• 2 .50 11'111'8 :.t 3ff l/ldmf'k '·'· 7.09 ()pp, Fcl' :os S t Off ..... m.Fct ·:n t .94 flfl'DY 1 j411.24Lft!X Fd '·''SI• SOISl'lrt 'I . olO ' e S ice ~f~~rt1" 1~.11 1t~ Ftlrflct 1: 4 1:61 \.l!X QllOUl'i . S1"tlnel t.6S 1G:.19 AGE Fd •.15 4,1.S Fm Bur1 9.3' 9.39 Cp Ltdr l•.1116.2( Slntr't' F 13.37 14.SJ Allllltt. '!·'113.56 Fld Ritt t.07 · · Grwlll '-21 6.15 MAlltlHU) Oil~ 1 A ol'll Fd l .13 ll.~ •01DILITV Re•rch lJ.U 13.28 ~om0 " 15 ID J.61 I V U ·~~ F '·" 'ti ltOUP: LIDIY Fd S.22 5 70 n ror .o s.n n a ey All'\ vr1 t.oe • Briel dab •.• 7 '·"' Llf9 '"i" 1,22 .:,. Fllf "'1" Am Qty •.«I f· )•o!•l 11.41112.'6 Unc C•p .. ,, 1.$1 H•rbl' 7.1~ M ... ,.. l!iXPltlSS ~°""' ' '·l~ OOM L191tl I " FUNOS: '1l~ 1J': l .2" tAYL,li• ~{J.::.1: 1 !·" Downey Savings and Loan c1ot11 7.3' i.01 f:11)1' io.26 C•P Oir•tt.f012.tc1 >.oorc·~ Mi As . . I t t I J:;c:.,.crn\"' i·\.l f:lf v1n1 10.43 11.67 M1111111 l4.!2t 1•.29 I""' ;,\ !!·f! U 11 SOClatJOL pans 0 COnS CUC !PIC 7'4' '1'17 Ulid 15.21 16.70 LOltD: ~Iii ll... ;:11~'01 Ui . F ta' V II "'' 1~· r:· f.W.tt" •·•• t.n Afflltt .•• '6.-.0 'n s . °"" 1ip , an o ce m oun m a ey, Am Grlh . 1. , fJ'::m F .t.~ 4.40 Arh 1111• w 1'.11 ,. At • ...., ll with construction starting in "'" in.in ,;, .26 ~c'l'!ifl1Att· ""', B¥_c111, ,'",.' ',','" 11eMA "{i''. • h Am lnvat •.69 4.69 fOGi AMS • .. ui.-11 j· .30 "C.p '"" 1 J.9• November and t e fum open-Ari\ Mvt ':!l 1.n F n " .t 15 415 L11t11n '" .211G.ll 01• .,..""• ttt.•i · 't d · April 1974 AmNt Gr 2 2.45 F " lnct 4:,o ,:30 M•nllll'I 1.9" 4.JI Tr•t , ,; 1~ 1:15 mg J s oors ID ' . ANCHOll Fin "' s.a. S,Af MASS s:o1 . Vl.l'ltur ......... ~, The Offi~e Will .be located in GC~~f:11 A.60 5.0A 1riir:: VI 1::~ 1f:~ r~:; r:: ::~ 1:11?~: 1:-·1r'" the slwppmg center currently Fnct "" 1·"' '·15 FlllST M•s• F 11.20 1w so Gtnf' ... ll~I~ d t. th . g,= I·t:t ,.~ INV•STOlltl: MASS PNCL: ... , '"" 1' I •::u un er construe ion at e in-ventur .:.1 ,;12 311e Fct s.n s.n MIT• ' ·11.0212,04 w 1"" O"''"" 6·4l tersection of' Warner and w1 N•'t 11.St 12.10 sf~ Fi ~Ji ttl ::& ll:~ l!Jf r-r--.t11 • 11:J11Ur . AllrOll 3.61 3.96 Jsl M\1111 13' 1.39 MFO 1Sot 143D l':'~... 4 •IJ2 Magnolia. ~)(11• F 7.80 •.n FOllUM o•Oul': MCO 1.:11 11:.t h-~D '· ~$ Downey Savings and Loan HouoMTI>f4 ~ lg'l ~::: '¥·= 1~·U "t' 1v 2.ot .OI Cortit FO"~J'Ti, '" . t' f ded ' Fund A 4.Sl A.ff Colum .. ,, ,·.,Mtll'lor l0.9'10.K 01-ff C111x·, n..SOCla ion was oun JD FUl'ICI a '·" 1.• 15 Ful'll'l 6;07 6:07 Mlct Am s.11 s.66 Proon-"ta ~6 t9'7 In Downey which re-sioc.11 s.u 6.16 Fctn Gr 4•50 4.n M11Mt Fct 10.•s 11 ,«1 s1 Fr Gr .. 61 ~"2 >1 , Axl Sci •.01 (,JJ FOUNOEltS M5B fd lJ.6213.62 St Fr tnc l.tO I mains its headquarters. It has 3;~~111 l~:iJl~:~~aJ"~:: 531 5 ~1 :r, ·~g 1'.~1~·~1',"•"••' ... 'r .u.10 -'S:: t ~" 000 000 •th Bavroc. 1 03 16t 1 ' · F G •• ' N FDS· asse s over -· , · w1 B•vrk Qr s'n 6·,6 ncom 11.u 12.1• Ml "' • .... '·" Am 11>c1 i.n ,,; b ...J.A • .; d ~Kn HI a·n 9'n F Mllllt 1.n 9.60 Muom QI A.10 S.11 A$Mt Fct I J l ts ten ranu:.;:S 1n opera ... on, ~ Beacon 10._,110:,7 F Se>ecll 10.n 12.00 Ml/Ofo1 rn 1.62 t.37 invest 1: 1.;:n foUr more planned inCJUdlng B•raer I( 11.09 11.09 ~r...'ff~ltN f.S7 t.37 Mui Sllrt 1•.9S 14.tS STEIN lltOI ~-' . Btrksl'lr •03 4 40 ltOUI" Mutl Tn 1.15 I.IS ll1lanc 20,Af :io.47 the one in Fountain Valley. Balldstt •:6• s:01 DNTC : 156 1 29 N••T'""•"c ,'0·"1 '·" t.1o1u 10.1tlt'11 Bell Fdll '·'° 10.27 Gwtll Sr 7'31 ft009 NA $ I Stock l•.->1ioo Brown J.lS l .SS Fr tncm 1·15 f 03 B1t1nc 1.5!1 t .l4 SIS GltOUI'• , ¥: · BULLOCK VS Gv 5 1:~ 1o:st B1>nd Sr A,J( J.11 Gnvtl'I 6.illl' iUr Drive-in Eatery Profiting ,UNOS: V11Utlt '" l " OMctn .3.'1 3,74 lnccrn 7ft (t'J& flu!I Fd 12.5' !l·" RH CIP .:sa :02 Pt'91 Sii( 3.17 6.42 S"V"lt .:'2 9 u c1n Fct 21.Sf .'4 Rf EQIY 4.27 .... lncom ,,,2 $,OS Te(hnl .. 18 ,·" 2,v~hr i:ft 1~::i "~ LtEo 11.60 12.68 Stock Sr '·" 6.'111 svncro F .. ._ 1;0• NY Ven 1n1111n ~d Mf ctD 9.ot f ,(11 Grwlll 6.SJ 7.l•TMR Ap '·"•'Ill Br"hm 9ss 9ss tlNDS INCP NllW ING L": Tempi G I.JI tYa CG Fund ft710.7R GlllOUI'! (Qultv l·S."' t•,tt TOWtr C {tlo "' CIP Trln 10:96 ll'.tt f:"~ J·!l :·;j Grwth 10.10 11 .'3 Tr1n C111 I, t,02 Despite Jargon and Cos"8 Cent Stl• ll.21 U.4S lrldU$ tr 10·-6 11'17 s, ...... , ','·i~ '1'·102 Tr•vt EQ lo.rs ll'lll rl'!ANNING Pllol 7'11 1'05 N ... r I Tudor H 11.1111.11 FUNDS1 Gl !Twv ftO 7'46 NIU Ctn! S. I · 1 10!!1 CG ).Jt 211 e11nco 10.16 11.21 GE S·S p ss:10 · N11.1wt11 '·'' t.tJ 'iillti c1 3.~ R. Briel Fct !·" 9.1S ,.,.... SI>( 6 a •.JS Newlon t)AO M,8' Ul\ltltd I ... ., l"'om Slk .16 l.31 GAOUI" SeC': Nw .. .,.. 1S.~l 14,Jt Vnlltind' .:.2 Grw!h S.12 S.60 Aotlt F ~:s2 6.04 "''"" W}<I 12:n 13.14 UNIOH s1•Vt.e1,'l< ~~ t·t5 {·tr Bllll Fnct 7.54 ,.i~ NICl'lllt l'-211 1,,21 Gtlt0\1~1 • 1· Vtfll•_!I' ,·!J ,.~1 Com Slk 10.6111,61 NHI fvtr 15,o.l 15,0ol Brcr s l• 13.V ''· ATLANTA, Ga. !AP) -The man who calls himself "the granddaddy or the fast·lood business" says business i$ bet- ter than ever despite rrislng prices and the specter of food shortages. "I run this plaee li ke Padercwski plays the piano," grinned Frank G o r d Y , millionaire owner of The · Varsity, a 21h·acrc landmark near the Georgia Tech cam· pus. Gordy calls it lhe w o r I d ' s largest drive-In restaurant. LAUNCHED THE year alter the 1920s stock market crash on an investment of $1.860, The Var5lty sells 22,000 ham· burgers on a good day and - Gordy noted with typical h)'Jlel'bole -"more Frcnch- fricd Olllon rings tlian any three restaurants in the coun- try." An estimated 2 0, 0 0 0 customers step up to the restaurant's two 1 S 0 • f o o t chrome sandwich counters or drive through the double.deck cur~servlce lot each day . Prices, pegged for decades on the slogan "A full meal for 3S cents," have risen IS per- cent this year. Gordy said he does not plan to rajse them again when the beef price freez.e ends Sept. 12 unless absolutely necessary. MeanwhUe, ~·snot worried. He said he has had no trouble getting supplies ol beef or other staples -all of which he' buys by the ton -and antic.lpates none. "I lost $300 n dAy for n month on onions a little while b&ck," he aid. "bul l wasn't about to ralse prices. ~1y customers wouldn 't stand far -MAS• . . g1h FAIT> ··~ 4.60 Ocllfl!I 6.31 '·" Niii Inv I k-1 . 1 k 1 1 .. i osToN · Gr111 1n<1 r,· :ic.ot om@9a 1J.1 '·" i.rn c•r• 1't&--.. , It. too tie oss. Fnd Bc.i S.31 9.1S ... ~~i'LTON iti~.43 0 Nell Id 11,71 11'.71 Whll\1 1t:'613, llELPlNG HIM maintain Fr"" CD s.u s.'3 f'unct /·" •.11 C>M0 •• 1w,'•"M1~10J,16,lS UNITEO FU s11rr 11. '·" '·u Grwtti 15 ,, .... • Accum '·" the attitude is the fact that Si>ee:1 !·n t· i 1nc«11 s'.tt ~.s.1 0o Alm 1G.09 11,03 lll'ICI '"<' 1J.3 ,, . Cllell! P:ct I .51 1 , "4lrt'W<ll 10 •110 .0 Oo l"nd 7.10 1.16 Cont i/fl t.&s 10• profits keep c I I m b l n g coLoN1A1. H•rt Lv ,·10 1·,G 0o Tm• ''°' 1.12 c°""1 Tfic: 'II , ' FUNDS! ~ f tt e'?l TC Ste t.1T 1~.7' tncgm l:L fl customers keep increasing, ~::tr' l~ 11·~ Hkll'll s:.. · P•r•""' ,,.,. 1.cw sc11-11c · 1' automation has r e d uce d Fllnd t •:6, 10:" ~::~: 1 1:~ 1~:~ ;::u~'F ~::J t~ u~~~1;. 1t' ' I b J()(I ln th t 10 Grwlll j·02 6·58 111er1 C11 9 •• 10 3' "1111'1 Mt l" 2 S-US Gvt5 f emp oyeS Y , e pas l~cm ·ft 10.411 ""' tlr rl • 1:11" .,..," SQ :&'.!: 6:6.l VALUI LIN ~ years -and the dr1ve-ln sits ~~~~::r0 ,t:~ 1l~ :II( '8~ 11.~ 1:·;; 0;1•1 td ~.~ •·" 11111 Lnt s.u , 00 OOe Of the most Valuable Ta;n.~MWLT :':. FAm '.M 3'.11 {.,1e~ ~~ :·~ r:~ ~~ ~! lots 1n town perthed over an A .. u · 1.G1 1.1e itt''i:;..., 3;:U ,::r, :,1111rr ~-ts ,;., v11 soc: 3:ie 1 . . C Lll j·"' nvern G t•S I'• 119 ,t ,~ t •• ANC~ expressway mterchagoe ID omp {r 6.S6 .11 ,.,v rn" 12 ,113 iu 0111 Trt 2.t3 ANDl1'.l1 --· I omD .D •.10 5.ll' G •• •. ,, •. ,, •U)NJll'lt PO: lfl'o'fll lj do~'t1town At anta. orn11 ct 1.01 1.n .~~ ln~iC 3:03 · "'~ ,:,. A.9§ '·"° vs ,..,, : · omo P:d 1.11 7,1• Inv 9.,. 10 tS 11 u •''"" ,. .. 11 ,. ",1 Soecl 7 'It; A colorful tradi tion o f oncrct, ,',·",'·",,, .. v.,T · · p1.,,.,. 11 •.n10.oovflltrblt •· c ' """ b•• th Oftl n~ .OO l· l"OUNSllL ~'-""" 'A• ,_.... Vl'l9!'il IA I "'tsecrac ... & .. 6 cur uups -e n11n •w s.11 .16 ,."""'"\ ,,, 1.J~<:>11 ('11tci ''u11110 v1n11wo ... t f -·'( OllMI I" 1 5& 1.SS 1"111111 v I'° ) l4 a•1"tr 11:0.,..•• .,.i.c; I J'·" mos amouus was COn tt.'Q an ontr111 rJG 1.H ,.,. .. 1, 11 "" (t1 r?•wti-11 ,. ,, ,. 1111"!'111 c ' Nipsey Russen -helps foster e:i~ro,f. 'i·C 131;~ iNVl!:!-1: o•ou": ., ... ,..,. "., 11·,.. .ust:,. ii~ , Cwn Olv 541 91 '"' f\., ~'l'I Nw Hor t7T •nW•'"' Mu 10'3 · the drivo-in s success even 0.11111 f23 · ~g~11~0 !~ l~··,.'""' 1 .. 1• Wlll'!O 111. 10:11 i though curb service Is no Dftvh:111 1.10 • ~ M"11111 9 .I'll1n 1• &-.,.1.n. i •• J ,, WILLIMOTOf( ·-net..t.w.t.111E ~...... ,, :n l'O ..... , ... f'I.• • 1'<\ • 01 ltOUP1 ij' longer its minnstay 01touP1 , ~-ioe• I " ,,, ....... ''" 10 n 11 o• t~Plcr :nl"' ' filKll t.?61 I? V&# Ptv tJ t;ll'"'T"""~' IYMf t . Gordy, who now ha !I 11w F • 91 9.11 1,.,,. itn ~;1 1•1 •11 .. ns1 Metro" 11 118 r 4.62 s.0~1 ,,. _,, __ 111 ... n J• T(l'llll• 1_.~ tY.'O restaurants near the it1vt11~ 1'·(3'tfi f\-witi J:t :1; ii:,.,,11<; ••• •.J' ~""' u.- UnlversitY of Gcqrgi~ In ~~; 1i·J 'S.~ lr~u• ],)6 ~'h ;~,g; ;;; W::rn: ~~:'1 n. Athens and another In DR'e~Fus Ott!' T.,, s~ ·~ .. ,,,. 1•· '~' •.J• wi°"" 1.k..j: suburban Atlanta, lists two ~;;!'~ ~~ 1jJ~ 1t~ l~~~1 ii:~.~ '!·~i '! ~~ ~.~~., F ,! ~ if·!! w.f~ 1~ ~! 9 i~ reasons for his Success: Spc~ P~"'lnc~ 1tn, '~:~ l!ril~wJ: r.~· (:t' .~::: F 't~ 1;;: :1~';' f:i J: and \'olume. 3-t C1~1 ;·11'1*2 1M111 otll 1 n • 4& Rink-! ''·'' ... ~..-cltl!d. . EA.I! Mu ,70 .20 Hin Sit •• '·" 1••.c. !o l.04 1.1' ¥tll•llll. I I • I # OAJLY PILOT s '.Within Gtcidelines' Chrysler's Offer ' . Rejected by UAW DETROIT (AP) -Chrysler Corp. bas oHered the United Auto Workers a proposed con- tract ealllng for three percent increaaes in wages durJng each of the next three year:i, plus coot .. Miving protect!on and higher pension bene!Jts. Company officials Including William O'Brien, the firm's vice preau!ent for per!Onnel, said after presentlng the orfer to the UA.W Tuesday, •:we don't lptend to talk about specific costs. We'll just say it's within goo-emment guide- lines." Un~ borgalDers rejected the offer unanimously. Theoller made rio menllon of voluntar.y overtime, one of the union's key goals and orie which UAW Jeadjo" repeatedly insisted must be part •of anY settlement. Chrysler said Its offer would provide for each h o u r f•y employe wage increases in each 9f ~ next three years ranging from 11 to 23 cenb per hour" The propoaahcalb for .......... •I three Ptrc<li> or $4.40 ~r week, whichever is gri!aler', for s a 1 a r i e d employes. The finn said a typical d.sStmbly line worker ·tn both the United States and canada would get bMe rate tncrtases or 43 ce~ts per hour. Thal would include an Immediate base rate boost of 13 ctnl! per hour and 30 cents more by the eDd of two years. SINCE CHRYSLER has the only international agreement among the dom es tic automakers, the UAW Is negotiating ·for both Canadian and U.S. workers . By Including 30 c e n ts transrerred fiom the cost of living allowance f 1 o a t , Chrysler sakl lll offer would bring · an usembly I i n e worker's ~ba~ rate from a current $4.48 to $5.21 in the third fear' of the proposed ron- tract. However, the union contends the average wage at Ford, General Motors .and Chrysler currently is $5.12 per hour on straight time. Chrysler chose an assembler for it! example and that group is the largest but lowest-paid a m o n g workers <:0vered by the UAW contr,ct. ·PllVATE TllUST RlllDS AVAILABLE tr0A MAL UTAT! Lo.\19 1M I, 2nd TRUST Of.ED8 •1~ To '2fill.OOO Uf" 10 IO .. lOAHS OM TIUn' DEED COUAttMI. *""4>«T IOdlTY MIDS -"""" CO H...-port ~r Ol'h9 ~ 8-ich, "'''· {714) MWl24 NATIONAL SILVER SALES A11nch11tco #1. openin9 of ffioir Newport looch ofllco• In tho Coritinel• lonk 8uildin9, Suite .. 01, •• oicch1.sivo Oror19• County tlpl'lllntotivo1 for N1 tio nol Mint l11c., pl'Ocl11cor1 onllf refiner1 of Offlco1 ore op1n d1ily from 1 AM to 1 PM ertd ''' 1foffed with 01porle11cod 1ccount executf-,.es to di1c1nt lncll-,.id1ol requir•• ,.,.,.h 011 doflv prlco q uototlor11 cf "SILVER.," tho iP1.Y•1tmont of G•OWTH i nd SKURITY. PLEAS! CLIP &. MAIL T01 NATIONAL SILVER SAW Ctntlnelo Bink Building · 3333. CoHt Hlghw1y, Suite 401 Newport B .. ch, Ca . 92660 (714) 645-4450 '''''' 1oncl mo litortlure Oft ''SILYE.R," tfie l1twthnont of • Growtfrt I Soc11rlty • , , , ••••••.•••• , • , •• , , ••• , •••• , • 0 Pie ••• phone mo -Hou11 1---l , ... , , , .. , , , , . 0 N•m• -..... ...,..._ •. _. ............................... __ ._ ............ .. VTN Corporation of Irvine has rePorted revenues for the fis<al year ended May 31, of $19,463,736, up 11 pereent com- pared to $16,473,881 for the previoUS year. Net Income for fiscal 1973 was $287,8'19 equal to 26 cents per share. compared to net In· come of $623,150, or 67 cents per share for the year ended May 31, 1972. The 11173 !Jetlres are based on 1,099,802 ave.n1$e shart'!;.CI outstanding; t b e r e were 933,792 average share! oubtanding In 1972. Addre.ss --···-···········-- City & State ·-· ... -............... -.. Zip ·--...... -......... .. Phon•: RH. -···· .. ····--·-........ 8u1 .... ..,. .. _ ......... -... The decrease in earnings In the 1173 fiscal yur compared to 1972 was a result of losses Incurred during the fourth quarter ended May 31, ac- cording Jo James J, 'mndlc, VTN chairman. Complete New York Stoek List , .:.~t-uJ..rr . • ' • ' • • . ' ' ' . ' ' I ' ' ' . -' . , ,....,., • .. • • I. Tu~ay's· Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List I'' • • I -..... • .. .i ~alysts Pleased I • . . , ,Im s D.IJLY "I.OT •• ·-~ Finaliee . ' ... Br,i,efs I , e. Alflertsow'• , BOISE,olmm -Subsllntlal sales Increases, •COIJpied wlthi redriction, In operating com.• enabled Albertson's Inc. ~ malntaln earnings ...,..ib, ll W8S 'announced Monday. ·-r Robert D. Bolinder, prest., dent of this Western states", supermarket cbaln, report<d; sales JO< the %&-week first llalf, totaled $404,&s.Z,:IS!, an ln- creue of 31 .percent over last-.,. year's sales of '308.75~111 . •. <:...... &I Speclll. lo 1lle Dolly Plot EL ' 1Jit:ONTB -I ' Indlllirlts !lad net lacomo ' $3211,11\lO .... ~ <Onts'. ··~ • salU:ij-.m,llOIF~ tho n llll/nthr·'end«l··Ju!J> i1~1 oat..i wllh AAtlllO .,. ':re ~(JO ia{efot,te,llH:·· t¥, ~""' \)erloll • ,.... .... ~I Sta,al~ E. llilale..,.. ~''fr.m ..... ~ .......... jllll proYlslGn f<r·lo- come tues.·wn $181,toD oi 1!. cents a share ·IS compared =-] with 1181,000 or 14 centa the ' . e Lltto" Goal I previous year. 1-0S ANGELES (AP) -Lil· ton Industries said today !bat new cost targets for 30 destroyen being buUt at Pascagoula, Miss., are 11Well within contract c e 111 n g prices." Litton issued a statement In reply to Rtp. Lte A!pin (J). 'Wis.), who said the compony has told the Navy It needs another '11 mllliOl1 to ceve:- COll Increases on Ila $2.~ blllion ship cootract. eo.11 ... v,. LONDON (UPI) -The dollar Inched upword In !!um.. pean mooey marke\I Tuolciay .! reversing Monday's downward} trend. Gokl'I price._ &lilht·j ly. "The Ouctuations In AUj)Ult have Uttle to do with tr. I underlying trend. whldo ii ., l gradual improvement of tbel: , doUar," a.Paris banker uld. I eFr-•<:11.,..e I LOS ANGELES (AP) ~ l Unity SecurlUer Corp. ,., Bever)J lb11s broker-deal Orm, bas been aecu...i la a Securlttea and Excbuice ~ mislion complaint : ltaudlllel1tty manlpUl&lfoc I lltoct of Oncnlt Inc., a \lloh • corporatloct wllb Ill princl)ll , place o1 tius1ness 1n -. I Woodland BiDL ' : , 14 DAILY f2LDT WedntSday, A119U1t ?'f, 1973 TONIGHT'S TV IDGHLIGHTS Alter ltfa1ay T11ntdowns 'Graffiti' Boosts Director's Image \\Wld let me make the picture film maker emerging l'rom the learn all the basic skills such if I rewrote the sc..--rlpt. I nallon 's universJtles. as how to run a camera an" finally got Universal to agree how to record sound. One or JANG THI DlU M to back me _ bu t onJy A NATIVE of Modesto, he the best things Is that you get SlOWLY" tPGI By 808 TIIOMAS CBS 8 8:00 -Sonny and Cher. The Third An- nual Bono A wards -a music and comedy spoof Qf awards cerelnonles -are presented. Guests in· elude Jeon Stapleton, Chad Everett, William Con- rad and Lyle Waggoner. ABC D 8:30 -"A Great 'American Tragedy." A veteran aerospace engineer, thrust into confu. sJon after losing his job, faces an uncertain future. George Kennedy, Vera Miles, William Windom. LOS ANGELES IAP l -"At least l can get in the front doo,r or studios nOw. ·They no longer say, 'George Lucas. Oh yes, he's the guy who made that strange science-fiction movie, Well, I wouldn't let him get clooe to actors.' " because J got my friend , Fran· happened t o meet to s~ thousands of movies, "LAD: ICI" cis Ford Coppola, to serve as cinematographer Haskell past and present.'' :Ii~~~~~~~~~~~ producer. We made the deal I ho the week that 'The Godfather' Wex er, w encour aged him LUCAS WAS a prolific film to en-11 in the film school at maker at USC. One of his short KCET flll 10:00 -Rich at the Top. Drummer Buddy Rich and bl! band perform :a varie ty of mus- ical styles from jau cllssics to Beatles tunes. Taped live at Rochester, N.Y. TV DAILY LOG Wednesday Evening AUGUST 29 l:OOBBDEIDllDID-11llll-. ·-Ci)_ ........ ,_ llW..Wlu4•Alhl .,,.,_ 111 .. , ... fB LAI Ttrm =~---.... 111M11 l:lO @ -a-tci "'-,..,... (ccrtoon) '86. (I) Cll IM W.ltlr Cronklle ._ ... .,.,_ 111-.•lfflli ... m...,,_ ID "" '"" 'l1oa '" Ill_ bay ll'l-• m-.-..... _ T:OO 8 11l B llll -g _ 1w _ rn-(l>o! ..... ~ .....-( .... ) '~JW W'YM. Un ·-· Cll ·-""" fJWW111frU.1 mi""' L.,. 1111 -""""' f.ISl•,..w .. ...,. ·-·-a.. im-II,i)W••••11c. ...... ·-- lzts ht m111t kttp his runlly to- pitier lo l1t1 the uncert1lnll1s of Gl> Df• .. th• Mure. m...,, 1rttn11 .... m lepant&t u111ware "'"'• t:OO. ([) ... AlllllSt All 111111e11 , •• . Mlllrit critlalty W'Ollnds an .W.rty prlal. .,,.fttltty tut of fur lh1I his contusion wlll bl rm111d, (I) .. ,. ''" Ufl QIDn .... EE "''"' c.ni.. fD rtlbtl& P1tc:!Mft Folbinpr C)'ntlri1 Goodi111 illustr111S1l1111111b of thl folkJont: hi th1 list of I ttlrtt·Plrt un.s. ~lOQ­m"' s.ar1 fD M111 llllJU. M11 Datrora ~flow Gently" Thi story of pollution of In· l•nd nltrwap, 1rrd wt11t c1n, ind Is, beln1don•1boiit it. Im Mlldlda ltallan1 m 0 Clfa di Pofttn lf) JtJ1111:1t Lln1111p Procr•• 10:00 IJ Cl) C.lllftffl (A) Bro1dwl)' IC· trm ROMm1ry Murphy pll)'* • IU· ! pe1Visin1 nurst who ls a k11 fl1ur1 in a hospital dr111-theft c111, Jn I whlcll C.nnon Is involv1d. o amSWCH .,., "'""" P1pm" (R) Probe 11tnt Blanco traUa 1 missln1 sports flfllr• who furs for hls life. omm•-rn Twtllrtrt loftt D rn m Owtfl Man~ ·~tc1 ol Doubt" (R) Marshall Ul1nds his nia ICCllSld of 1dult1ry by htr hl.ISIMirld btclvu her son wu con- ctWtd by artificial iMtminfltion. D IM+t: (C) (Zhr) °'Ol'Mt Clltkt" 7:JO e W.U, WttW el JM.U.. Wiit-(s11J) '63-Bttindt l.H, Ivan [)cs. ... Bllblr. f11don &vt'Stl. lllJ· (}) ..... ,...,_ fJJTrflhlilln QWlit Tilll•flli«CdlHHM fD!ltlCl41 ltidl at t11t To111 "Blach Y1t1lion" (R) Tht Boyll T1ped llw ft Rochtslet', Hew York's. ThiJ Is dlredor George Lucas' ironic view of the change in bis forlunes. A year ago, he couldn't get stud io bosses to return his telephone calls. Today they're calling him. What made the difference? ''American Graffiti ." It ls admittedly Lucas' salute to the end of his in· nocence. a hauntingly ac· curate portrait of a tcen·age night in a mid.California town or 1962. To tbe background of 42 songs of lhe period, the young people do their thing at the high school prom , on the main street. in the dri ve-in and lover's lane. "EASILY THE best 1novie so far this year," wrote Stephen Fa rber in the New York Times. "One of the most i'Tl portant Ame!'ican films of the yea r," said Charles Champlin in the Los Angeles Times . PauJ D. Zimmerman in Newsweek called it a "brilliant, bi tt er s weet memoir'' with ''tension and tougb·minded complexity.'' ENTERTAINMENT came out, and they \li'ere im· ,..,... Il l · I h 'he Universitu of Southern ms was a science fiction pressed w t Francis." / . California. He was a member subject "n!X 1138." When he Wilh Coppola as overseer, of the class of 196&, which has later became assistant to Co~ Lucas Cilmed ' ' A mer i c an produced John Milius ("DUI· pola, Lucas expanded the film Graffiti" in Petaluma and San inger") and other new fi lm and n1ade a feature for Rafael, Calif., in 28 days. Or makers. Warner Brothers. "It made rather, 28 nights, because the "The university experience mo;1ey in the theaters, but not entire actio n takes place dur-in the a-unti·ng offt'ce " .,.,;d was very valuable to me ........ v • .,..... ing a sing le night and early because 1 knew nothing about the director. morning. mQvies,,. said Lucas. "It ls a It was three years before he "I budgeted the picture at great environmnet in which to was able to get "American $800,000, but Universal insisted learn ; you're all friends en· Graffiti " before the cameras. George Lucas wears his that I make ii for $600,000," couraging one another. 11 is Now he's finding it easier to new·found praise well. He has Lucas said. "lt ended up at almost a-Renaissance at· peddle his next feature, "a just turned 29 and might look $700,000, plus aboul $50,000." mosphere. spa~ fantasy \Yith capes and like a teenager except for the , George Lucas is a shining "A hool , h ray guns -a $6 million idea trimmed brow n beard he sc cant teac you which I'll make for '3 wears. His view of the film ___ ex~a:m:p:l:e~o_l_l_he-:;-:n~e~w~b~r~e<><l:::o:,f::w:h:at::t:o~s:h(\O(:=:'~b:u:l::::yo::u-:::c_a_n lp;mii;iiiil~lio~n~ .... ________ i// WQrld is mature, and that's) U.A. CITY AND SOUTH COAST CINIMAS-TUaSOAY Mc understandable. He has been (LADIES AND GOLDEN AO£RS)-G,.l!N TIL J100 ... M. through the mill. "l took 'American Graffiti' to every major and minor company in HollyWood," said Uie di rector. "and every one ol them turned it doy.•n. They told me that ii was 'a musical montage' or 'not interesting enough' or 'not enough story.' "Al\lERICAN International Pictures . finall y said they Jim ll'OWll "SLAUGHTER'S 110 Rl,..()Ff" "DUEL OF THE lllON ftST" lflll 111 Coktrl Ill! A NlghllNll'll LID 0 N•WPOO! BE4CH lHTll AH('f ro L!OO 1\11 ~ 11 ~JSD NOW! FIRST RUN! NOW • AT REGULAR PRICES From In• Mlk•rt. el frltl 11111 Cit • "HEAVY TR AFFIC" "PUTNEY SWOPE" o .. ,..s..,1 Gltl>da Ja<k-"A TOUCH OF CU.SS" Llr TavllH' "NIGHT I '"'· Hm" CINEMALAND & SDUTHCDAST #2 WEEK DAYS 7 & 9:15 S.lf-SU!-MOI 2,15-05-HD. l 9,15 NO RESERVED SEATS ORllGE #2 show starts ~11st ALSO -"lEGEND Of fRENCHIE KING'' IXI 8•111 IR Col1r1 . --·-... trlcl1 N••I Scott JKOby "IAXTER" l•lh In ColOr t (PO I • WATCH" -tolu- "Tlo!E OTHER" ••tn I" CelOrl 1"1111 N1wm1n "NIGHT WATCH" "LADY ICE" lotn In Color! (f'Gl .6,, "THE MACLNTOSN MAN" "' "THE CANOlOATIEN lolft In Coler1 C .. 01 Totn L1119hHl'I 11111 R..,nlltlt "WHITE LIOHTNINO" ON STAGE IN PERSON. -AND - lam/IJ's YICl!ioft II di~ when "Top of U,.1'1111, .. drummtr Buddy ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;:;~;::::===-Hanr """" • ctttzen's amst of Akh 1114 lit bend ptffor111 1 pot- somt: nude "-'""' lllthtrs. poarri of muslc1I. stySil 'from )au· -· O Kti, DJ 1tel&ftbtr dalSles to Beatfts' tunes. (J) Y111 AlllN ltr ti , • C'J ""'"' I """' IC! tZllol l.,lO B ,,. lad "Tnd: et ... c.r {wtS) '54-Rob-00 0111 ., ltJWI trt Mitchum, lib "'"1t.tr. tD True Adwllture \II WIW Ill!.... @) Yldu tn Coafllctt m""' ..,. m ""' '""" .., _ li!il _,_ ED ~·1• "Victory Will ei Mr 11:00 II B 0 mm m ..... Mo" (R) llJCIJ!lj fB-lll'T ..... Dr .... n OOIM S1eJ ..,.., m••-,..., 00 ....,_ a.• n CIJ ,_,. .. Qef .11111 St•P'• m rrvtti " CNltqWICtl 1 ~ Chcd bentt 1111! Wl11llm Con· ID MMe: "laly 111 1 Jllll" (com) raii 1r1 ll!Mllll tilt redpieftts ct ''2--lr1n1 Dunne, Rllpti ~llunr. "Thi Th ird Annllal Bono Television 11:15 m Cl11111 34 I Awards," 1 mllSC ind comedy spool' ol 1w1rdl CftlllOlllts, elllCHd brll:JOfJ (l)CIS WI Malle: (Cl "Tiit lyl1 WtgoMr. Cf1lll S.a" (dra) '53-J.ck H1wk· 0 (Ii @i3 Mlmoll "Anltorny of I ins, Don11d Sinden. 415'" (R) otfictt1Millar1nd RMd O ®ll?:)J1•••r C1rs11 Jo•r • ree11vt ll'l'lrll c.alls 1ballt 1 l1mllr Bishop Is aunt ttost. distirrbanai. 8 Mowll: "'rn fin Md 1 ladp• 0 -= (C) (2"~ -'"' 1-> '5<-W.,,,. ...... I s,.c." (sd·fl) '70--Aijo Ito. 0 (})WK 1PICI hlCI P1rt 111 ol D Cll m ltWt ,., ... , •••• , IV pcrb. Tht Russl1n vtrslon ol ''T1k1 Two 1PICI Hit to Ri1hl'0 • R•· Tolslor'• mcsterplect that tallows I cuptr111n1 from lnJurlu rteeivtfl tht 1111 of Russi• rronl 1805·1812. In 1 IOf'tb1n ptnt, Cftcrllt tb111b ID T1 Ttl ~ Trwttl f1rauson Is rtpltdlll Mm 11 WOfl wfth 1 bltck 1111n. lZ:OI (I) MMilll liUOlll GJ Tnlll If C. qc ~ M~: "Ulllptp CMI" (d11) m lllt U11ttw•1at11 •_....n Gordon, let Pllllllpa. mu-.-m--•-b m nat's °" lie t*ef -111 Cll1..-sN111 Wrtdlllt ...-elllt AHi• '•llr l :lO D ~ m NOC""'""" -1tuc:1• "Tht Gr11tlst Collection l.Z:JllD ...... : ~· (ldv) '64 -sttw1rt Gnn11 r, ~n Grl)'. l:OO CIJ ODCIJ -D'"-""" of Thtm All" (R) 81!\ICtk Is ccllld l:JO 8 0 .... in to ln'11Stl11t1 when $23 Jnllllon worth ol 111intin11 1r1 stolen 111 1:45 8 Mtlfl: (C) "'JN • ..,. (ld·fl) rvut• from "e" Yori! to Boston. ·~ttr Ci.rsll!ns. Cl'H'lstopll•r l.H. ~ ~ 9!A~tt=H=i:11 ~:: Z:JO GJ Al~ Shtr. .,,_..,.. In· ti(' (dr1) '71-Gtor11 Kennedy. :!"' ... ...._ tf tit lnldllll Y1r1 Miits, Wlltl1m Windom. A HI· 1r1n 11mptc1 1nt1neer, llll\ISI Into J:lO II Mft: "A Ubly llerf' (com) conlusiofl titer losln1 his job, r11I· '47-81rb1t1 Hile, 8111 Wi1H1ma. 1:00 m "rltlltt It 1 ....... (com) Thursday '50-WiUiam Holden. Col"" GflJ. 1:1110 "Dnllll" (dra) '57-Jtff Chtncl· DAYTIME MOVIES "'· ~'"' •~. ~.JO D (C) --Id<•) '54-Clut J:OO ()) (C) ..,trtls " hltl•" (mm) .,_ '47-S.tty Hutton. John Luad. Clblt, l.1111 Tumtt, Victor M11ur1. 91 "0.,. tf W1M -1 ..... Part lO:tO (l)"'li.ct ,... (WU) '57 -I (dfl) '63 -.lick LM'lll'IOll. lH Gcort• Montromerr. John Carrldlllt. Rtmick. 0 •r.. Uhll SMsl"' (dr1) '59-J:JO 0 "tf•lllllt With Catt" (dre) '51- f'tdrt Arrn111d1rU:. 0.111 Jonis, 1o1n O'Brtln. U. D ·-ff ,.. ,,..,. (.,.) 4:00 & IC! ...,,.,,,.. Imp) '4~al 'SZ-D1l1 llob1rbon. "111 11111 0'8fitn, Clclre TreYOI' . ...... ("'71) ·~· lridlfU, 4:JO Cl1 s. .... lllAM 11•1111 KOCE, CHANNEL 50 ' -... --Jl,(O SrA01uM ·2 :·: 'lo .-.UH'l'l.L l.l.1\£' T • --. "·-n'"' SrAOIUM ·J :~ 'lo ~UJ,,!.t.t..:;/.l.l:t=rr_. MATINlll TOOATll "HEAVY TllAFflC" (XJ "WHAT DO YOU SAY TO A NA KED LADY?''' "SO llND O:: tA U51C " NO A.IE5ERVED SEATS With .!ult• A;,dr•wt ... "SCORPIO" "LIVE t..ND L!:T 011!" ... ''THE' MECHANIC" IPGI "?APER ~IOON " IPGJ ... "HAROLD & MAUDE" "t:UNN't" Gll"IL .. ,,, "Owl 1r'd '~~ ~:rJsyc!Jt" I PG I -''OklAHOMA $1.00 Tll 2:30 AT WALK.INS WILLIE DAVIS CAPTAIN OF THE L.A. DODGERS WILLIE'S BASEBALL CLINIC ASK QUESTIONS AND HAYE A GREAT TIME-EVERYONE WILL RECEIVE A WILLIE DAVIS BOOKLET-HOW TO BAT in both theatres this FRIDAY AUG. 31st AT 12:15 ONE SHOWING ONLY AT EACH THEATRE ALL SEATS ONLY 75c riiBll '\110 "'"''" , ..... Hlo\•~··'"''"' Start Weekend Early The wee~end begins along the Orange coast on Friday. That's the day the DAfLY PfLOT publishes Ila WEEKENDER, a lively sCction about the lively ans - and where to dine out and other Interesting things that can make a weekend a mini v•catlon for you and the special people in your life. Start your weekend early next Friday. Star! It with the WEEKENDER. E'vH: from 1 p.m. Sun.: Co11Unvoi:1 horn 2 JI·"'· m MANN THEATRES All THIATllS COOllD 8Y llf•IGllAflON llOUIM PllCIS · 1•tti • NIWPOIT MJ.1112 IXCLUSIYll TM 9rfffftt d11t4 1f ttMi llUNti FU llMlllett "DUEL OF THE . IRON FIST" -A11d- "CUT0fHROAfS NINE" -·- lOGll MOOll A5 007 ' 111 J•mM .. 111'• "LIVE ANO LET DIE" + "THE MECHANIC" with Chari•• lr•llMR Doth I;, Color IR I ll~ol" ..... ' wel l ol ltAOH ,,, ... ,. !ll NO ONI .... 11 .tiDMftt '11 ~ INW..Rt &OUl.f MfOW! • Hf.I.VY T•AFFIC ca1 ·~ • HAMM t• OI GOD Ill ;, ·1n Oego ...,. , , I t:1p11U-Oll·•l l'l'lll -DtlNIT'S Nt'WIJf ..... ...... ONI llnlt INDlAN tti "' LADY ANO THE TIAMP Stn .. 00,"'I' .i 8•oolo""ll! ISo.i Nf·:Hlt j&MfS UOWNt'SlAUGHTll'S llG 11,.()ff Ill NIWIJf II.NJ N I~ DUil Of THI llON FISTS t.~oln ,..,., .. t it ot ltnon 11r.JtlS ONl r Ol:IYI'* N10W19101 JISUS CHllST SUJlllST~I "' SlllNT •UNNI~ "' • ' I t [(IAI IJolae~ae' at Bo1vl ( Pavarotti in I~, It must have· been a little ~er a yur ago thnt thlJ Fine Voice ~ eritle, homeward bound rrom a ~ l"'tber dlaappointlng concert, .: tuned in the car radio to a "'*vorit.e station and found all ,.&he compensation he could !\'ever have wished for tn an ;f-lutoly magnUlcent tenor TOM BARLEY is one of the most gloriously peMed slories in grand opera ; he is Rodolfo, from first to last, and he brings a freshness and charisma to the part that most certainly put him in this writer's book as tbe best Rodolfo he bas listened to. Music Box ~10::polltan lo~e songs, an by any means. .~aria or two from ''Aida ," a OPERABUFFSwilharoom :1 anatcb of "La Boheme" and full of records will assure you, ~1,JOme superb work on two en masse, that, while we can't ,j )>inkerton ariaa in "Madama live without them they must ' Butterfly" -they delightOO never be seriously regarded as "'-thll critic throughout his an adequate substitute for the >,'>journey home although It was real thing . ~just as infuriat ing to miss the It took more than a year for ~announcer's · I ate r iden· this impatient writer to see *Ulicatlon of this fine artist. the real Luciano Pavarotti ~' A call to the radio station stand up and add his stage _,.took care or that. "Yes, that presence to that superb voice ... was Luciano Pavarotti," we bu t, rest assured, he was well · J were told and we were also worth waiting for. ~ assured that our inquiry was His vehicle at the Hollywood !-not the flrst they had received Bowl last weekend was the r.• same "La Boheme" -or at least extracts of it -that had figured in part In this critic's first encounter with this im· mensely impressive artist. FRANKLY, AND this may be a little hard on the three other principals in the Puccini classic, he dominated the opera from his first call lo his final scene in a way that this lover of "La Boheme" has not seen on any stage. Pavarotti isn't just con- vincing as Rodolfo, the starv- ing poet whose Jove affair with the fragile and pathetic Mimi It was understandable that, immediately after delivering that analysis, one should be taken to task for arriving at such a verdict after what was, after a)l, shnply a concert version of "Boheme." NO MATl'ER. Pavarotti did enough at the Bowl to con- vince this writer that a full length, costumed "Boheme" would only serve to strengthen the conclusion that we have fowxl the man who may prove to be the greatest Rodolfo of all time. ~ ~;Telethon for Polities Let's not leave his fellow artists out of the final reckon- ing. TQ_ey were Katia Ric- clarella, .a splendid soprano wbo was not, in this writer's book, ideally cast as the frail , wil1owy Mimi. She. seemed a trifle ·hesitant at some key moments of the work with changes of pitch in some in· stances that indicated an un- familiarity with the work. ' Y.· :;,, . , ' ?': ~! Stars Will Help Bail Out Democrats ' ' By BOB 1110MAS M r the ' Ma d " TV fit~ 1 acyo ·ue ¥:!LOS ANGELES (AP ) -series. itlfam F.rviD and "Maude," !\laking the pitch for money ~ct van Dyke and Rube.rt will be Senators Ervin , '•wnp11r Ted K eel and Humphrey, Kennedy, George ~t1! ey. enn y McGovern , Edmund Muskie , y Heatherton. " ' . H J Ala Cr ~ are some ol tbe stars . enry ackson, n anston and Jolm Tunney. , will 1ppear on a na-The idea Of a telethon lo pay (-i W.tbon to bale the . olf the party's d e b t s ~ tic party out of debt originated last year with John lay away funds for the Y. Brown Jr., Kentucky Fried ~ 4 electloru. Chicken tycoon and a ~'F« the second straight Democratic Party money ~. Democrats will stage a raiser. support fo.r the parties." Brown said the party's debt fron1 the 1972 election had been whJttJed down from $9.3 million to $3.l mUlion, with many creditors agreeing to settle for half or less. "It's hard to predict bow weil do this time, but I am hoping lo raise $6 million." LAST TIME all the proceeds went to the National Com- mittee. This year, Brown said, the state co.mmittees will share equally. "Because of that, many of the states are staging dinners and rallies on the same nig ht, wilh big screens or TV monitors foc watching the telethon," he said. Christina Weidinger worked hard as Musetta without ever CQO\'incing this writer that she bas the stuff great Musettas are made of. We plump for Douglas Lawrence. a young singer who tore into the dif- ficult role of Coline with gusto, as by far the best of a cast that came a long, loog way below Pavarotti. BRICKBAT DEPARTMENT -Let's hope tbe sign we spot- ted at the Bowl last weekend isn't going to be a permanent feature. It read: "Tonight 9,500 or tbe nicest music lovers in the world heard this concert at the Hollywood Bowl." How sickening can you get. telethcft to seek gnw·rool.s "Most of the pollUcians ftn1pcll1 111PPOrt. The seven-were dubious about t he bWr lhow on Sept. 15 wiU be telethon." said Bro,wn, "but ieltcast by NBC. we iroved. it would work. Jn $'~"1be emphasis will be on the first one we raised $4. ~tertalnment," s a i d ex-million from 4.00,000 donors, ·eruuve producer Nick Vanoff, for an average o( $10 per ~ o1 TV variety shows. dooatio". lr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o :~one pitch for donations ""ill "TIUS Tl1\1E ~·e expect to L~ as subtle aJ po:ssible." do better. 1be public is now ~ ·:111E T E L E T u o N _ accustomed to the idea oC a ~ • .!1'rnerica Goes Public "_ will telethon to support a political ~ ~; .fouth Coast Re1J crtor;· IMASM MIT! "CATCH· 22" ......, ' ...... e entertainment by such party. Most oI all, Watergate ormers u David Jans.sen, should have done more than WIO. THRU SUN. ,,_ G R 1 anything to coo·'n-people of 1m flllWf'O•T, COSTA MUA "''"' ••s••YATIOtllS, U.LL-Ml-1"' r'r-·-~ne. o o s eve t ~· "'" !';Grier, Rieb Litt.le, the Filth the need for a broad base otl~:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;~~1 ~Dimension, Andy Williams, ~~I ?ivarren Be atty , John "bavidaon, Jim Ba~us, Jackie ' ~· Carl Remer, Steve • ; Wiirllol f¥11en and Bea ~ur and Bill ~PORT ;1.1. NOW ' : "CRIES AND WHISPERS" ' , : 7:00 ond 10:40 p.m. ' -.?• • '• ' 1 • J. oloo "MURMUR OF THE HEART" 1:40 p.m. Call_ ... _ 1c. ..... 1 •• AN10NICINI'• l••RllKll !\ POIR 1 "JESIB CHRISf SUPERSfAR" I I\ I \I \ I I \ 11 K . . . ·' ...... ~ . " . . . . ' MAnNll' DAIL T GEORGE C. SCOTT FAYE DUNAWAY JOHN MILLS JACK PALANCE OKL HOMit CRUDE '~ •• easily the best movie so far this vear:" _., ... ~ ...... a • NEW YORK TIMES EXCLUSIVE ORlllGE COUNTY -ENGAGEMENT lil1lill JollDll<"t"'S""' • , ............. ~.~1111 wfrbldJall !!JO ...t ' .-sGAllEl·-aIS l'tll9G1 ·~CIRll·MIDOJC(ltt 2nd (GI unD SHOW ~ ~ ·---- I ' ..... ~ OfS*'ll" ftCIMCO' oriQJ ., o--.... ,._ ..... r.--- ·-~ - DAILY PILOT 25 FRANCO ZEmRELLt ........ 4 ROMEO cB'JULlET A wild raunchy rip·roarlµg ya.ml (;1)1......iw.PCILIPCll........, -s•-n"_" __ GEORGE c. scan FAYE DUNAWAY JOHN MILLS JACKl'i PALANGE OKL!HOMA CRUDE ~ "A MAH CALUD SLEDGE" DENNIS WEAVER JAMES GARffE·R - ·~· . , ........ . • • • ~. . . ... . . I I\ I 11 \ I I \ 11 K ''" > t • • ·• A L..A V 'A <.•I ' • ';7 ~ .a I .. I F O WARO S l\111\ f\111( • • ~ • .\ j\ .... • • • W9.8TMIN..,..ll AT OOUt • •' "f , • • I' I ol I ol 1 mwl .. CIMOltl uan.. ........ rwTL ••a-• " .... .,._. DAILY MATINns AT IOTH CINIMAS n.o.a....c...-.-,...- JWl •• •L • PllU11·n°271,..t Plllllftl• ........ ~•111r · a• "'""'~11~-~ 2nd AT CW'l \:2nd AT CINTtl ROBERT REDFORD ROBERT REDFORD '1HE HOT "THE HOT IOCK'' IOC:k'" • An 1:J*· MUC'_\'nf"'nod1:n dc,.,.-rk.ii !l. iron mcn ... •nd adc.i'Ulnl "''""'*'" Pl.US· HENRY FO~OA Om• S'ariff. -- Draa Can11a• , "THI IURGU.lS" "THE CANDIDAR" l'OI DtUlY MATI,.11 . 10nt ntUTID ( I\ I \I \ ( I \ 11 K '"'~t'l•~ AT A{i <\V ' ~U;I A '-If \,\ • ?7? ~l ol l I, • t r ;6 041LV PILOT Wtdntsday, August 29 1973 PUBUC NOTIClli PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NO'l'ICE PUBLIC NO'l'ICE PUBUC NO'l1CE PUBLIC N01'1CE PUBUC NOTICE DELINQUENT TAX LIST 1972-1973 I Ulk t:l.a12 Cll Lot ti, ""-" lO:S Tr t6Jt Loi 24 $1Jf.5' It.. h N#ly\o\. Lal IJ and S(ly ~ l'I HIElyY,11'"1 lnC AlltY & '°' of If Adi• lut U,..Jllli $1•111 ol (allltnll• OIY " HW't't OCX), •ottw Ge«9" IC. Al" 1...otl 16 Tr ~· H•nl1t T ,, •lt ,,,, llf>IU..21 Tr H~flGI Tlltockn L .. 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S.S.. t)S 10 Pr1(1 Edw<!rd S • AP 111.0.1.07 Anderson,. Sl1nln-G fJ'l'l A,. 171.uz,.ol Crlfllltt JOHp/I 8 AP 45-112-04 Ltkl Corori.i dt ! Mtt LDI 19 Ilk 1U Ind $WY -----------S dt VIiia Tr Lof B Blk ~ PQI" In LOI Mftler Ntllltn AP l~I 11 Tr 414' Auouor1 ~ NO. ll Lot Tl E ?I Fl Tr Sl2t lo• l U. :U Tr Lot 6 Ilk In MtS.N IS Ft LOI JI tllk 143 U51 'l1 U06 "6 L.or 74 Im 21. 137 S6 MeGulrt JHn E CUWI AP IJ.1t2 11 AP S2 112 :t2 lltWD ot Coront del Aar Ro land flllrllotrt J AP lS3-024 SO Tr lol!t<" ltunell J AP 14'-JU.1&. 'l'r 41"6 Au1Un Edith M ti 11 AP 111.0.111 (00( .Alll!A ... JI Lake Tt Loi 13 lllk Ill JS43CI Lot lT Olk"' Sl71102 .. DELINQUENT TAX NOTICE 6)o?1~OI18 \521 06 • Lot t1 1311..iJ A$$t'lt0rt M<IP No. 13 LOI 3 "''° LI Fr<1no An!llonv J Jr AP •S..»217 Gllek M•tlO D •I ol IMV ) AP 11172 c~rrlllo John IJTl AP JS)-(m.Q, Tr S1li.t W1Ut<" I , AP 1""331-'6 'l'r 482 Melll« Wiibur E (MY) Af' 111-061 S1al\d1rd P<!ClflC Corp !CR) AP 1.., 211 L1~t Tr Lot U !Ilk 133 'm 16 11 RtsUD of CorOlll dtl Mtr Loi I( l ltr tlJt LOI 2 Por of LOI 11 IU ,._ Lot 111 Sit/ 16 21 02 Asi.esw J M•P No ll Loli 11 lo It 16 $te II T 6 11: 10 1 TrlanQular P1ru1 01 ~ Mlrjorl1 A AP ~-(II Conat u3 ISi) SS Deed• Rlcll~rd A AP. 1SH3J.21 Tr PMrfvo, Lindi AP 14W61-41.. Trld au Inc. I .. llO Ltnd I!'! NEV. SEV. S12.. seen on Loi • !Ilk l40 All E• SEIV 15 fl Mtrk15 WllU..,., f T .. ,.p 57 111 lf Tr CERTIFICATE OF REAL • OPERTIES Ol HE 4302 LDI 1'-SSl) 11 Lor 11 t.11t Mi. Mettler W1IDur E . AP 11 1~4: A• t1 lt9 n .,., LOI ' lllk A II J1S O• rlt S D TO T STATE Oimn•lloo 0 _, A Al" ,,141,-04 Ex Burrun Plllllp T (Jl I AP 1"'16110 .seswrs Mop No 13 Lot 47 incl -41 $116 t2 COOE ARl!4 ....,I Slpte Gordon G Al" 46.o.tl4t Canal Slanal l"rOl*llts Inc fCll) ,.P 11~1 -----------------------------1100% lnl ln Ml RI Ii low SOO ft T <111'1 Tr<lcl '32l LOI 94 13U 61 Folmer Ctcll J (UM) AP lll-o.12-36 Stdlon Loi ' Blk 13' S'1tl! Of SK 'lO T 6 ft 10 lrrtQ 1 01 At I" SIC-, 11 ' 1 r parllll P1ul (JT) AP J..Wn.(18 Trec:t A.s~sor1 M~p NO. ll Loi d 11111 (I, Colwtll Cq. AP 1l9.()110ll SK 11 T 6 R Soow Oowlll L (JTl AP 46-041-05 $19•J.4 ROiier! L Cl Tron Tiii Collldo,..Tr .. M1r1r of !ht CO!llllV of Or11io1 Sta11 ul Lot '° II n6 90 '32' Lot IU $:166..59 Sl26 92. 10 I M Ac MIL In SY, NE'~ 'fl$5 Q2 C&n•I Slcllon lot I !Ilk 11' 1'11 lf AP 114-661.fJ SK 20 T ' It 10 Por of,io< CilllornW. llei'f'b! t trlllles. II foHo.... Pollock, JI/Ill E~ AP 'l»ll-oo2. Tr SlOS Ct1!1!.1 .. 111a Kanoo CWO) AP 116-A0).30 !lrown Jmt A AP 111<066 17 A.s19Stors Sulhlrllnd JoM C Jt fJT) Al" .u-0414' Tll<!t nollc1 1 hereb'f gl,,.n 11111 bk.ouJe of llOflPavmenl o1 1111 to!al 1mot1nl Loi 2 Unot 2 of Prolec:t Located on AP Tr 5.4t0 Loi I S 1..S Fl U 2l Map No ll LOI 211 Incl LOii 282 2tl I. Upton J11nt• T AP I., 151 ... Tr Ult Ctllll S.Ctlon Loi 6 Ilk ')I ...... 92 II mt!" I IO Ste 20 T ' R lO lrrta Loi In Clut fOf Ii Xe$ as~menh llncl Olller CNrges t,,...ied In Ill<! Year Im for t1M lS-062 1• IO!l-11Wr wllh Ill Und 1/:W lnl In wm Lyon DevtdQllmfrll Co Inc !CR I 3rU, $'136 51 LOI 54. Ull.•1 BIOi\' lli»trl IA AP "411-07 C•ntl AP l I ":rt f lial Yt!ar !971-1m SllOW<l In clolh1r1 4nd t tnls opposllt Ille dtierlpllon 01 tile Loll A/8/C $4\5 O!I AP 1••1 I Sl Tr 7321 LOI )l S1S2 n Kll~srnlth Alle<t ,.,. 111 2:91.07, Sic 81llev-Jimet C AP llt-151 17, Tr 633t !tet1on Loi ) Ilk ~ 111)1 110 ":~iv-ANOtliln Lid IPTI AP PrOr>trty (Olllolned In Ille hit btklw th1 real prnl)4!rtles on wh1c11 1ucll amounl1 H.ivlt1 C O<twMPA Sr Of ti AP t)l..31 Dirln Arl!Old p AP 146"'1 11 Tr 592' 2 T S R 11 p SE• SE~ SE' Loi 41 U3J 67 Hollar IEdnl M AP *"°"3-06. Cin.il '12 Je.(IO.t, Tr 73,, LOI Ullll I O Btkonr 1 W1t•t 1 I~ were Dy OP«allcm ol law h'I my otflct ,, Room 110 Fl1111nc1 Bulldlng 011 Tr 5105 Lot 11 Unit 12 ol Pro1ec1 Liii 10 $541 11 P6 DO 70691,.."oR i2n ft• • 111 W1 "°"' Thom11 W AP 14f lll-37 Tr Ste!lon Lo• , Blk 437 llAl9l 62 0 P klno ArH 1 D of P•Ofttl LOClffll f,JO NOi'lll Bro,,dwly Clry ol 5anl• Ane COunly or Ct"••· sold IO In• Stlte ol LOCl!ed on AP 2s.o.216 to!lelllet-will! In I ., """ .... 21 Lot S-4 '321• c I J k E AP ~ c 11 SK If ""' 111 C:llliloffllil 11 ) e'clldr I" M., tll 1114 Jtl'll .. , II J ... e lt1J Und 1136 tnl In Lots A/B/C 11'9 M Se,ond Wtilttn Horne Flnanc no Cohen AIDll<'I 6 AP 111..JOI 23 Tr 171 Cochrttt Ewllvne F 11 ti &/or S.zlo o II K in on AP 48 ln.ot I0111!ll1r •!Ill Ill 1 Rt.Ill Propeorty 10ld to lllt Sl•T• nwy bl redtttnfd by payment Of 111 unpaid AP 930-31$ Tr SIDS LCll 1' Unll 34 of AHoc:latn (PT ) AP 1.....e~. Tr JSS1 Lot 3S 81k 2 5199'!1 JO!leOh AP 151 IOW9 Tr •104 Loi )1, II~~ ~~J:ie"d°'i~Ol AP 4'-06l tnl In Lot I 11:1017 ll Xh <>nd 11st11mmts l~rtier wlln iucl> addlUOMI Pl!flllltn 11111 !Ml llS Project 1.0Uted on AP '1S'°'2-16 !0111trltr Loi 5o \J11 n ~ Vin,,.., Donald W AP 111 321 25 Tr Ml•,. lO. Ct I S •Ion Lot lO !Ilk '36, lSU &2 pttlctlbtd by law or may lie r«ltemed \lf>dtf <1n ln$tllllrntnl pltn Of r«remptlon wltll an Und 1/l6 lnl ln Lois. AJB/C C. Mlclla.el In<:, AP 1~25 Tr J551 411 Lot 10 SI'! $1.37?41 COC11r11n, Ev1lvnt f t'I 11 1./0r Wllrd Peor~~ ~Ollolld S (JTJ AP ""'°'"'°' COOi! All:l!A 7«1' Alt lntorrnallon COl'ltlr11h19 redemption or the 1nitl<1llon of an lnilallment plan S252 St Lot a. $692 .a Pf(llter J1ck A (UM) AP 111 :m.01 Tr Darren I!! AP lSl-llS.07 Tr ltn Lor :n c 1 Sll;ll Lot 2 Blk 434 M:l170 ll\Oll">0$0CI e BrU<t {Will Al" lll.o::ll ot l'tdompUon ol ,.,. sotd propl!rly wltl \l'OOtl ftQ!le:SI be furnished by Robert L Dept of ve11 Allftln OI srate of Cit AP 411 Lot 11 NW'll $217 Cl Ms.I 54 •nr on I G ti I IMVl AP <M.07J CllrOl'I T111 Collector TreoSUl'lr Ind llldffl'l(ttlon Offlct<" ltoorn 110 flllance (001! All:EA 1 ... 2 1'6-S23.03 Tr Jll3l Loi lt W•'2 Sllnllbantz JDllll AP 111.JU-lt Tr All Coe/Iran Evtl~ne f 11 11 1../or Mln1 02M~!~r':c:":1!, LOI llllBlk 4n 5,91 51 26 1!~ 27d;: I llJk ·,.~~I.OS T "'1 8~ 6)1 NOftfil ..... ._.,, Senti AM CoH..,.,ll ' Canan Rol:ll!rt E AP 14' 541.(13. Tr 6136 lot 1• WV. N\IL $.I07 t4 D1nlel S AP Ul~l.ij Tr 4AOt Loi '3 DrllCker GIOflll W Jr fJTJ AP 16-111 L ', •6 1AH E~Ely tO Ft lltt 71 ' S1mosm Aud"'! O t i 11 A, ll'°IJ0.65 Lot 1 iSl624 Blilllftll« Patrick J fJTI, AP 111"61 l32091 o X ., I c•tlly lll!Cltt penalty of Plrlvrr tblt Ille fore(lolno 11""' •ncl Clll'TKt Ex Post lnl In Mii ltts s.ec 13 T ' R 11 Durch Hovtn Homet In<: (Cit) Al" 16). in. Sic u T 5 ll 11 w 2"11 Fl E 73611 St•nd.!trdPoclflcC.orp lCRI AP 1$1503 :!Sp~:;· :s .. .-1~~~123.ot Tr T 1rrr.J~~1; ~,Au1~' AP 111~ Por NWIA SE•,. el Dnc I!'! DO 7191/MI 090-07 S.C 2& T 3 JI. II Por NS\• Fl N ~ 71 fl NV; SE V. NE~ 19114.72 01, IEx I~ Int In Min Rh Briolw JOO'°' L ' 10_ •.,o 'swt '' " L ' '°" ' • llO!IEllT L CITltON Olt $197.A6 13 •71 ~· Emplr1 Financial Corp AP 111 ..... 1-36 fl Tr 16SO Loi 21 'lll..13. o "' 1 ~ o Tix COltecior TrN:wrer Cu11nlnoham Geof9t E et 11 AP II._ $Jabo Et111tr F Tr AP IU.121'°6 Stt S<!c 16 T JR 11 1 Ft Slrlp of 1.onG ln W\.y tl •I :W COO& Alt.IA 7.fll d O< ""'" 150-66 E~ Pos.s Int In Min Jtl'I SI';; ll T & 'n T 5 R II E ti Fl N 440 fl W 490 Fl SE .. SEl.4 NE'~ $9 SO CODE All:IA ~ Mlrkln M J IJT) AP "°1442' Tr 101 ""°" R 11 Por NW'lo SEiia a• DHc I" QO NV\t NW\/o NW'4 -EJ Sl'li U911~ Ballenger P<1trfck J CJT) AP 111._..1 Lot 912, $1 06&.0. trvlne Co &/or Fr111r T1mml1, .. AP ElftQMd at Jani• Ana covrny Df Orort0t Ol'I "-"Oust l.S. '1"7). 11911M7 Oil Sl'7.... Walll(<! Nol• J el 11 AP 16J.121-36 43 Sec 26 T s. 11 Por NE '• 1241 7.. K-Slellhllfl J (JT) AP lJl.1'110 Tr tofr~v.;t<;! ~:.~'· w AP 4' 1"°20 Tr ff 17J..N. Tr 1140 Loi '' un.v • 111 tt'lf1 1~1 tne loOowlng 1bbr..n1tlons Ltwfl 1tulll M., AP 1U..tn:1'-Tr ll03 SK :ti T J It 11 W to1 II Fl EV, W 315 Fl Princ:t OIV"°""*'f lrx; INOl AP 111 UU Lot 10 W04 26 C1.1r~y VI lllll 11 11 AP 46-l7l 1l Tr 1rvt,., Co &/or Al'dlf'IOll Otel»:-'l!f .. .... l.IMd for llM WOl"dl Ml (ll)flOs.111 llMm AlltUllr i Maps, Btoc• 36l <M•P P• l6 Loi 17.S. UM JO Nllt NWU. HW\lo Ex H 4-tO Fl • »13 71 •11 26 s.c ,, T j It 11 Por SE \li Whitt Robert L (JT) AP ISJ..Ul.01 Tr to1 Lot 413 ~Wty JO fl $1.31'.20 Arrv:.''~~7 a.J:, 1~ri1 L~,!!' ~~',. ~ A~ndoned &lock. l) Incl Peret! Swithin !hot blact Brinkerhoff Vlrd c AP 1li.Jllo09 Tr AP 16).121-31 SK 21 T 5 R 11 E\'J W l!5 11.35797 &l5' Lot J Sltl.U. O..r All~ (NRI AP M-lr.J 11 Tr ll01 Ac.-Acr1 of Acr11 Tiie m11P1 refer~ ta ort av1!1ablt for :t90l Lot 112 'sa2l l~ Ft Nl'I NW\lo NWU. E11 H 4-tO Fl & W Coolin El~ M , AP lU.011 It Tr 360 Helen ln~ttt"""I Co In.: (Clll AP lS:t. Loi t10 M<lt'J. ~/ 1::2 I~~ l':'" Loi 5 AH Ex IWIV i2l-J Add-Addition ln!ipetllon In I"-ofllc1 of 11'1 Atstssor SecvrllV Fort COfp AP l'8-0?l-01, $tC '4.l' Ft I. E 65 Ft SllO S1 Lot 46 $731 9CI 1$2.fT Tr~ Loi 2. $1'3 S2 Johnson Thilmt M AP "°'lt3-12 Tr Adm-Admlnl•lrator ll T ' R II lrreg Loi In W .g9 SS Fl Seler'$111 & Clenllenon (JV) AP 16J.IJI RO(ltn H Ken1 Jr ISMI AP 112.012-ot. Wllllttldet., Tllorna$ E (JTl AP ISl-'222-VOi Lui 629 Ind All Ell SWIV 11 fl LOI lrvlne Co f./Ot Vl)rl Htf'lkll W""1 'r Ad"1K-A<lmlnl$frllrlx NW SVll NW\lo $5S2 50 06 SK n T s R II Wly l.ll Ac Ely lJ 11 Tr m Loi 21 $280 90 °" Tr"" Loi n sn. 21 "'° $1.134 IM AP •t-181 ll. Tr 1102 Loi ., 11 lU" Alo-Along AH Pf'OCllr'IV Ii ln tile Town1nr11 Soul~ oo'.im1nl' Cirl K et el AP l...oJl.ol Ac SV. Slllo H''> NWV• 117'09.. Mannes Llcnoll A AP 112.012.(13. :Tr 2'91 Limb. W KMlllllll el ti AP 11).26129 OtW Vlr11lnll fNOl AP '610145. Tr 901 lrvlM Co f.Jor JClllrlton lt!cht,.__, •• AP-AsHss.c:lr'1 ~p P1rcet Numbtt 1nd 1t1no1 Wes! o1 S..n 8rr111rdlno 1-Tr Ill Loi M tnd X i.t2v1 O<:e1n Vltw Co fPTl AP 1 ~111'°7 Ste Lot 19 All E• St , "44268 Tr '°80 Lot 28 IJll.50 Lot SJ4 Ind AU Ex NEIY II Fl LOI J13 AP o(tJl).07 Tr 1140 Lot 4J. IS,.32 • Apl-APtrfrnenl 11111 /Mrldlln 21 T S R 11 Por NW • SI 06111 Lecrlv1ln CorlM AP 112.(15(1+( 02 Ste llvdle Gtnilll D (JT J AP ISJJ:ll :IO Tr A$1~1atlO!t a lllslflO, Lt.nriy c (JT) AP 1'8-041 17 Tr Stlet'$tn g. Cle<tdenen (JV) AP lP. 23 T $ R 1l Por WI> Ellt SEV. SElt SW'~ "'3 Loi SI 1760 66 $l 01• :u CODIE A•IA , .. u ... Auoc-A$socl1ll1 IMPOllTANT NOTICe 6J7• Lot l1 S70t '° 131 10 5ec 21 T 5 R II POI' NW1t. "61 '8 1114'6 IM SOwers. I PllO't AP 153-181..36, Tr ••r.J Browll ltObert S IJll AP '6.2(13.0l Tr Al!V-AffOl'llty Fr1n1 Herold J Jr (JTJ AP 14-041 8•vdlwllr, Fred f , AP lu.o23"21 Tr LKrl~aln Corine c AP 112~S!l'l Loi 81 a!ld Lott 13 .. 14 $11116$ ;r \r.o.3~;,•nd LDI 510 Ind NEIWh LOI Irvine Co I.tor li.aaaon E\llllflt ..... _ A.,._..vtnul The nlmet publl!IMd ire lllose op-21 Tr m• Loi 21 $312 '4 5921 Loi lit MOS61 SK 25 T 5 A 11 Por EV, EV. SEV. SE ~ T&rlan Homti lrK !Cit ) AP ISl-31•20 Crook Fr..a...!ck W Jr (JTl "p '610-li el AP j,0.1<1)..24 Tr1cl SUCI LOJ• l. Bk-Bink PHrlno on !he 1977 13 lilt roll T1~payers NYO&ll'l'd Lt!IOncl E (JT) AP Ul..07 ... 10 ltl,11m1n l5NC CJTI AP 16.S-0714' Tr SW1.lo II 001 M Tr.ct 450 LOI 119 $41 Sf 11 Tr 907 Lot tl1l NEIY 20 Fl Theriot Ol'ld Jl.):t2 t2 ~ Bldo-flulktll!O wl'IO h•vt 111!.PCIMd ol ll'OPertv •ll!Ce Tr '5t1 LOI SS, $379 21. 6738 LOI 68 11 2.-090 SITomDttg Fort11nalln1 ti al Tr AP 1Ct1lh CUl!ori C AP 115.01113 Ex UXl,...e SWlv 20 Fl LOI 60J llOl 2' 1...,1111 Co f.Jt' Ylndlfbftk. Jot11 /I.,. Blll-lll«k M1rch 1 mlty find their """''" llti.d tor ~ Herbert Jr AP In.on Jj Tr S~Dll<'llng, Harry A (JT), AP liS-112-10 112.070-11 :5eoe 36 T S R. 11 It• ~ MIL In Int In Min Rtl lelow JOO Ft Tr 4U Lot Tilton !llVCI M. fUMl AP 4'-Ztl.ol Tr AP »-11.l.o2 TrKI ,,JO LOI 11 i1 IQ:ttt 81vd--8oulwird tl'lf reoiOll lllllf prttHlll ownets Ill~ fall Sl81 Loi1.5 S.1161 Tr 6rn Loi :U. Sl8)l2 SW'• SE'• NW\ll $67~Mi U. Sl406' QC/ Loi 1., MI02..S2 lrvlnl Co &/or 81leor Colltn. ,._...,. Bros-BrOl!tlrs ed lo PIY la•es Romevn Wi iliam C (CPl AP 9:10 SI Perricone Sam G IJT) AP 165 In 2t Trlw Nor m• L AP 112-302.;JO Tr ~Sii Meot•no Altl;tlldro A !JT) AP BS.01S-Mar.,._U Jl(k W AP 4' 24 10 Tr f111 211-41 tr 1701 Lo! S• $9'5~ Clr-<:1.-.:1<! 020 Tr SYll LOI 20 U111t 20 of Profl';;! Tr S965 Lot 51 $48060 LOI 2ll $62991 JJ E-I~ In! In Min lt!i Btlow 500 Fl LM 2Sf1 S7'5U IN1"9 Co I.for~ Sin'll/lt •• llllP ICOl-COMl"ANY PROl'ERTY IN Localld on AP Ull 021 1 taoetller w1111 1n G A Moc Donald E!f<llpmtnl Co el •I Mc Cloud Glenn t; AP 112-3U IO Tr 4816 Loi '5 1716 71 Pllibos ltost AP 16-<261 76. Jt t07 Lui ».JO).«! Tr ol003 LM 4l. » 12' tO Co-Compeny Und !Ir.I Int In Luts C 1 to C• Inc 1.. Lois (MY) AP 171.oll 2' Tr Sllll LOI ll All Traci !19SJ LOI 70 $36J 2:S Mlnihew 6-ll AP ISS-032.(11 E• l2f Por of Lot ind POf of Lot 330 S11<1rr E W !JT I AP so.JO:J~t, itVlri. comnwttn-e-twlltll HUNTINGTON IEACH CITY F 1 lo F.;J ll'IC IO!lllhtr with "' Und l/lJO Inc Adlacent Wlllrl191 Rlollh In \.ol B-S Urekiw1 Ht<try H •T •l AP 11!.:U,..20 100". Int In Mln Ills Below SOO Fl Tr 411' ~2,112 4 Sub Liii !Ilk sa Por o1 Ilk SJ.tt. .., ~=~:~~:n COOi! A•l!A 4.octl 1nl~ol~;~~n:~s ~WSl AP tJO 54~1 '1 :i~:. Edword B IJT) AP 171-NI n H~!4" 1I I~~ 11 2 ll Ac MIL In NW~ i.o;:eg~~.phen J AP IS~ Ex Uil&Vfll• WtteortrQ!ll PrQOerllK I Pl! ~~~l. ;~ ~L;c;a~ ~~!~·--.. C~ooperotlvt Tr SSBI LOI 51 Unit SI of Prolect Locoted Tr 541 Loi 117 All Inc Adl&etnl tsS}t~r~c~: :~~fa l~r,Jl2.J.4•21 Ste l~ Int Jn Min Rl1 Below 3CO Fl Tr .Ul6 ~:, ~~~ Linto~ltri Add Loi I lllk INlnt Co &ltT Wiit.on Mirlly l"\,.lLI' Corp-(:orpor1tlon ltadtt W!IUom S CJl) "p n.o70-l1 on AP 141.(r.!11 logelllcrr wllh In Und Wllarf&ae lllllhls In Loi B tiff57 Colo Mfi Frank H AP 112 Loi IOI UISIW Paonolc:k'1" Ptter A II i i (MVI AP S0.:111-0S Tr 211J LOIS !11?'6. '• ICP>-COMMUNITY ~OP"Rr• E• l~o 1111 In Min Rt1 Tr 11 Loi l !Ilk 11123 Int In .Lott SI to B 11nc: &. LOil EI B11rchort lllcllard UTl AP 111-0S3-10 Ste 36 T s R 1l p SY, SW;J'l~~ Bl1tzer W1t111m L AP f»f).()11 e~ •1-051.05. l•nt••Tet• Add Loi I Bl• SJS lrvlnt Co 1./fl/f IEPl)ltlOll Hirt/-ll ICltl-<:ORf"ORATION 1101 Nih .f:x Alley-Tllertot S~ -Ell 1.. E 1 rogtlller wllh 111 Und l/XIO Int In E~ ll)jN, ln l 111 Ml" Rls Bel-500 fl Tr m 4 Cl Ill'" • 1(»% lnl Ill Min lltt Below S00 Fl Tr 5'06 IJU n, AP ~11 Tr 1t1J LOI Q W.U 07 H • Cl-C-1 Alley LOI 5 Blk 11101 U,012 n, Lois GfH 126' 11 S41 LOI 1.U All Inc "dll(tnl WhlrlOOt Pllllofa Jua~ E fJTI AP ll1~l"37 LOI II Unll 11 ol Pro;tcl LocatMI Oii A~ Oavlt llalllfl M .W el 11 ITC! AP lr'>'I ... Co 1.Jor P•wllk J°"""" 0... AP Cntvr-<:on!lt!'Valor &111k Steuril'I' Ptclflc N1t1 Tr ti 11 L1rron(t Edith A 11 al Tr {NO), AP Rl9hlt In 011 Ul'ldtflned Area of «IO Fl Ste 3o1 T $It II W ISO Ft E 2t2 Fl H l.O lu.osl-1 logtt1ller wlrll IA Utld l/'211a In U.ot~ll Ntwport llttcll ClfY Loi 2 lllk 50-l61.0I, Tr 2t1J Lot 21 $1 Ul(lf Cy~o11ron !NOl AP 2J..-111.(12 Ex limo In! In Min r.JO-J.l..12.S Tr 5511 Loi 125 Unit 125 of Pr~ Cllllnnel Sii It AP 11H21..o2-. 11"71.'2 Fl S 16(1 Fl SW\& NW'\4 UC! "a In Lois" to H In<: I.. J lo L Inc $ls.I 61 2' t.441 03 lrv1no Co. AP 50-Jtl-OI Tr Jm Ltfl I Do-oe.d fl:ls Hun1l119ton Beach City LOI 25 !Ilk <2'2 Jett Localed Ori AP U8..o211 tooetller wllh Oept of Vtl All I of Mc: Clarrtn. Dennis G AP fl0.2).107 IJ 16J 1• ODs-Deeds Loi 77 B1k '72 $232 00 an Ul'ld 1/IU lnl 111 Lots A 1 to A 7 Inc & Huntln11ton Hartiovr Corp AP 111~--0J 1lNIS-l3 T 1 •rs Slate ot C.sl Af" E• 1t»l.. lnl In Miii Ith Betow !00 Fl Tr Sl>lro Arnold E IJTI AP •1142-lS Dtpt-Oepirtml!'ll AP 13-121 Of E• 100•• Ir • In Ml ll Rh Lots O 1 lo O 5 Inc IO!lllher will\ an U!ld Tr 54111 Loi 1 All ll'IC AdlllCf'rll Wh&rt1~ lluii And;,:o; L~P~I~.: T 4tll S106 LOI 101 Unll 107 of Ptoltel Located Newport Blach City LOI 5 !Ilk 1l COO• Alll!A 1•11 ~rlbe4 or OU<:rlptlon Hlllllfnoton BH(h City lot •e Blk 422 1/330 lnl In Loh G/H 1'228 97 Rlglll'I In Loi II S6s:J 71 l.OI ll 1352 to r on AP lSS-OSI 1 tovelller Wllh 1n Und SI RWl..U Plllll J AP 7 ISl..ot H ~I !11109 BlllKllamp Rlchlrd L AP t)l).Sl-lJl Roe Jtrrv L. {JTJ AP 111--1QN7, Tr Jonts P•ul c. AP 112-Cl3-2t 2r '°" 1/262 Int In l.01$ A to H Inc & J to L Inc ti 1':f'c11y LP• I Ilk 21'1t>d I.of 2 ;rkriri· trvlne Co .. ,Or Morris. "'°'"' ,.,. Olf.t--Dls!Tkt AP D-121-<16 Ex llXl'!!o Int I" Min llH Tr 5Sll LOI 111 Unit 13' ol Project :W7U LM H7 U4'•2 LOI 11 lSIJ«I l?U•S uO:•t o lfO..)U.Os Tt lHI Loi lS a.on.ti g~~~:1:on ~"S'lr';~ ~;.:i'~ CITY LOI u Blk •22 Loi ij~··~nc::' 1~f 1~48~t~ 1A'~"'; 7wt1'!_ ·~ A~,~~ 1~1 f6•11~J~int~n H~ ll!t~xi, Jonnson Gaflon B fJTJ AP 11r"411 If ,:;'r.!t'°::~1;~~!l 59":_ :;:-'l;1~r ~ van Kol~tf'I •crv " AP 41 in.at F!rit 1rv1ne c o •1or JONt,,,,.• Ar•ll\lr W\o A,. E-E11t AP 23-125-02 e 11 l~e Int 111 Min Ats LOii D 1 to O.J Inc tlJll<lll\tr w!rh an Und 3'9 Loi 11 Ilk A, Ill 01 ~'5S~~ lt~hll fl E 21t 86 Ft Nell. Loi It.I U11ll JM o1 Proltel l.oc.altd on AP Add lo NtwPOrl BNc~ Lal 4 !Ilk llt 170·>f4'05 Tr >.519 lot Sol 111•1 U E1tmt-Eosemt11! Hunllnoltln Beach City Lot 15 !Ilk 322 1/llO Int In Lots G/H $298... AP 178 11117 IE• 1~ lnl ln Miii Rll Tr Wiibon 0tnlt( s AP l'2-0n.ot Tr 417 l5s.o512 fogwthlr with a11 Und 1/2'2 Int W~ 6{ Oonlld L I «MVI AP 1 ~~d.~~\~" LC:,,~~l~~amU:5!, al AP 2).127"°' sJi00~!1 ~~srl U~ll e:::1 OI A:,:::'"~~.,!,; ":r~~ 20R=~ t1·~Pl AP 111112 10 ;:,i ~.:i.:.f'1~' ::"!1~ ~FhL:'utse!"~ 1:o 1111l~ll ~r~1 1"!.p .. ~1;.~.~"'E!* ~ .11:.:1~1on B LOI I;.~ 211 AH *"c COO• Alll!.A 1•11 ·~· :~;;;:n~l'll!'fWI ~jtyl~ It; ~lkM!i;, Rt;..H:llngtlll! &etch ~nd ~!i14 \~~ 1Lot!~~o Aw;1~nc '; Tro!:;'11yLo~d1~1:1B1llk1~0~111f 171-lll-ol F~r!c": ·~~xH H ~PFll.Q~21fi '11 421 :: ~n1ri';s ~· P~':'; ~:~T;., ~ 1~~ B~.!".:.:.!:'I,i!:! :~'" A~1 ::!Jr14 Tr L:'f1lltf" Tt<"IM Gu Al" SI lU«. tNm ti 11-nd Olh1rs. GtllY 011 Co AP n IUl-01 Hun1111111on Lots O 1 ro 0-S Inc togethlr won an Und Tr :ut Loi 2 !Ilk C 1111 '8 Loi• 6S&66 17"8 oC6 r 41 0$1-l tooe1her wllfl an Ulld 112'2 Int 111 13.I Lot 1 Blk 11 11 9CIJ 54 utJ.34. E1t-.ExceQI 8ea(h Cl!y Lui 17 Blk 319 Loh. 19 21 ind 1/3JO In! ln Lo11 G/H \:184 11 Fleka,',.'c'°'s~c~ AP 178113.ot Tr J'9 Ale••ndar Oon81d G el II AP l'2.0U. Loli A to H Inc & J to L Inc !113 6S s:iila~~OI L6';;k 8 109'1 ,r\1:;, 47 213o-30 Exto-Eite11lor E•eallrlx 2l !11~ 319 1215 12 lvty Rlch•rd E AP 91().Sl-ll' Tr 55111 Loi ' ~• l If Tr 0 7 Loi IOl $-02 22 Baca Ef!M11 ti 11 INOI Al" •»JS.Cit Ill! Etll COD• AlllA I«» F 6 M-F<!m'llrs • Mitrdl:enlS Minner Wllllam ..i it (JT) AP LOI _,, Unll l 'f ol Prolecl ~ltd Oii ,..,. Pa11To!o1 JI.Ian E AP 11l 11«12 Tr :Ut AP l'2.{ll!:J..20 Tr 411 Loi !OS 1J8I •1, Tr 5062 Lui 16 Unit 1• 01 ProlKI Loc•IMI .!:"'~on,.lt~118"'1, ,G .,',', 1•, .,, .. IFl)-FltACTIONAL INTEREST Z:J..121-11 Hunt! ton ~ 0" Lot S 1•-021 I IOQtlller with 111 Und l/IU In! 111 LOI 17 Blk D 1111 12 N I Id 0. °" AP 1Slo401.01 U2l 6.S. -~..-' <v ... ..J ' Fr1C1-f'f"Ktlon1t Blk lit Mf ll. 1111 Loli A 1 IO A J I"' g. Lob 0.1 to 0.5 Inc Gtr5h Edith 0 AP 17119\.ol Tr 1H 1,2~f Te 11Vl4DPrnllfll Co (Cltl, AP Trfrlflnl OIVkl C AP fli).U 11' Tt Manin. Bttlrl(t M AP 48..(123.(17 E1tl lrvlnt Co &for ~l'>tll John n.i AP Ft-Fetl logelher wltll it U d \/llCI 1 t I L t Lot 12 11 11 r • LOI 7I Ind Loh 7t • IO $062 LOI ll't U It 11' of ,...,Kl L IMI Mt\lf'llOM Lot 21 Bil I I-Sn fl l2Q..3U-01 'l'r ~2 Lot 12 "54 U • fwy--fr-y Cl'h W11!1erC APn.13'211 Exl~C/H 52_..11 n 11 11 n ol AP11t-1tl4'.Tr1HLOlil3./14 IU.30 andN2f'1Loll1 YllSU onAPIU-IOl-0~ 119,.,. . .., oco ~111«1and Fred ti at AP -.an,21 lrv!ne Co of WV• 1../or fowltfo,'W Gd~ardfan lnl If Ml" R!s Huntington Beacll City Loi Clorld!JI S Eas!Ofl fJTl AP t»&l l50 AP 171 191411 Tr 1J$ LOii 6 to 10 Inc 11 10 ~9'.2 1'2«J..23 Tr ll7 LOil '3.1415 BOV$Slacos AllOllO IJTI Al" 931 34.o:i7 E•SI NtwPOrf Loi II l !k I ll'lt 12. Murr11~ AP 4.51-46111. Tr MIS LM '15 Hts-Htlollls II Bk 22I llll.OI Tr SS11 Loi lSO Unit 150 of Projtel II Inc 31 •'Z. •3 & 54 '5993. 13 Tr '416 LDI 17 Unit l7 of Proltel Loctted lllrtlow Allred G All d.(IJ2 IJ £1st $612 1J. , ' CHWl--HUSBANO ANO WIFE 0 Brien How1rd f t i 61 AP 2').134-13 Locettd on AP 1.U..o21 I logithtr with AP 171-191-07 Tr 11S L0'11 l lo S Inc 20 lo OLN Atllly Corp fCRl AP 142111-34 on AP ISJ..411.01 Ml• )t Ncwporl lllk A LOI 1.W Nly 10 Ft Tlltn10I , .,, Hwy-•Ootrwey E~ IDO'llo Int In Min ltts H1111tl119ton INcll Und l/ll( Int In l.att ,.,_1 to A 1 Inc:~ 2' Inc SS. •J. Ste 23 T 5 R 11 Por N'.I> S.S:OO 11 lrldgrntft. Robal1 S :k"cl !JT) AP t:ll and Sb ,. Fl Lot l•S l'tN t3. CODI: A•l!A 14M wwv..-+lllJl"Wlys City Lot I Blk ,., Loll ,J, J & 1 !Ilk 21t LMS 0-1 lo 0-S Inc 109111\er will\ a11 Und AP 171191.ol Tr 115 Lots 27/21 SU n °"'M~:'r,, ll.iYmond E [JT) AP IU 1.i >4.011, 'l'r ... ,, Lot 14 Unit ,, Of Protect Limit• Arntt G AP 4Ml7+11, E111 lrnps.-lmprowmenh. M7'.51.. lf33/J Int In LOls G/H S2•7 1l AP )11191 12. Tr lU Lott 2' '4 I. .5l y N Lot 2' Bl~ B Ul.l2 Locilld on AP 15)..tl 1-01 Ull" HIWllOr1 Loi 1 !Ilk II 141• 11 lllC-lndudlng or llKOtportll!d CCIOPf'I' Mtrg<1rtt AP 23-1'142 H~ Han. Ol vld W AP tJO-J.l..ln T SSll $ttA1 an CIV Emm<1 AP 1'2191~1 Tr ltt Sni Alltft It (JT) AP tll-l'-30l T Lt Font /Mrt"ll AP .U-Ot116 NIWPOl'I ll!d-lnd\I'..... llngton Bete:ll City LOI 2' Blk 617 $l2J 96 Lut 177 Unll tn ol Proltcl LOCillfld ~ AP AP 171191 ll Tr 18S Lot~ SO!'t 115 2l Lot SI !Ilk B l2e 12 4116 Lri;; :XO U"ll JD3 pl Proltel Loe.et.; B1v Tr Lot I Bllr. 4 1311.19 Inf-Interest Humbla Oil A lltllnlf!O Co AP 2.J.U? U 1'8.0:Zl l together wlJll an Urn! 1/114 Int In AP IJl.lt11S Tr IH Lois SS & 56, 'IS ?l Ml~ty Mlcll1tl ll {SM) AP tU 1'1-ol on AP 1U-lll.01 $15S 6' OOd1ne Wlllllm A AP 48'°'7 11 Irvine Co. AP W)-1)1 lJ. lrvlnt s.it Loi Ilk ll In ltr90 LOI In Ilk 11111 .... ltno Lot lnBlkfl,M1Ut2 ,~ lnv-lnvesln1r11t HIHll1nglon lleocll CllY Loi 17 !Ilk 617 Loi Loh A I to A 7 ll'IC I. L.Olt 0-1 ta 0-5 Inc AP 111-ltl 16 Tr 115 Lot1 $1 & SI, $15 23 Tr 194 Loi 59 Blk A WI 16 H<1lt llOQltt' 9 IMMI AP •fl-l'-32'-Tr N....,port Bty Tr Lot 1 Blk J. U 1150. COOi All:•A .,. ... ::m::.'~~:~~rEHAHCV 1•,::v::1 '.es~1 M AP 23-14-13 h7~t":kw:l" on Ul\d llllO l"I 111 Loll :; ::::: :: +~ :: t:: :r ~ ~ ~~~ ':i L~a:~l~lk ~ :i 26.AP 1•2191 10. Tr 1,, ~,,A~o::.~l~llu~: Proltet Loc•lld A~r:n=. v.-~::"1rw111onet~o BIC~~ Klr1111M. Hlrlry, At 111"1U6, 1~'- IJVl-JOINT VENTURE HU11tlngl0fl !INCi\ Clh' LOI 26 !Ilk 51.5 Lot Brenei Oscor M AP nl-5"'204 Tr 5511 to M Inc, l1 I. • SU..SJ Hvgllt!J M1rglll't!I R el al IMVJ AP B•lltnc• Sllmuel M Jr (JT) AP fll.;M.. LOii 2 lo S ll'IC lftd All Inc Por Of SI Adi LOI ti 11 511.36 ,. ~ LA-Los An!llln 2B Btk 515 SJ:J6 SI Lof 70C Unit :!OC of Proltet locllted on AP A.P 11'1-ltl lt Tr llS LDI~ 45 to .g Inc lU ltl ll Tr 194 Lot 7 !Ilk A and Lois I •ts Tr 441' Lot 425 Un!! •1.5 of Proltd Lot ' Ind All Inc: It! Some I. H191'> Tide lrvlnt Co &/Of' C11111rd ..._.., It.. ,_,, (LEI-LIFE ESTA Tl! l!!d9•r Erwood G et el (MV~ AP 1'8..o21 1 IOll'flller with '" Und 11114 In! 111 $2 t.11 to n lnc 76 ta 10 Inc g. 19 185 00. to l7 Inc 19 10 l3 to l5 Inc: :n to SI Inc Loe a~ °" AP IS"Wll-01 USS M LIM & Piii'" Of St Adi Lot 1 All Jn I lk II 117..CI 14 Tr 4221 Lot 2' llCIU.7'. L1t-UIM or UM 2l l54 l0 Huntington Beech Clly LOI '12 Lots A 1 lo A 7 l11c .. Lou O 1 lo O 5 1nc AP 1711•1 :U Tr 11.S Loi$ IC\ 10 108 In' & 60 to l4 Inc 16 ta IOC Irie: AH In Blk A & Su11t)fam Homes Inc (CA) AP t'J1 9l-U.ltJ St lt«k1I 00..ld W AP 1111'1·14; l r Lnl-Llnts Blk 415 and LOii 24 26 I. 21 !Ilk •U tovetlMr w!tti i n Und 1/330 Inf In LOii LOii 111/12' 114.57 Loi$ 1 lo 1 Inc II IO 11 Inc JO 31 n lo OOS Tt 6J57 Lot 1 Uni! J of Project S<!nta Ana V1!19'1' lrrl111llon Co !Cll l "6.l LOI lO MIO IS. Lt~lmlled SJ 160 61. G/H 1264 11 AP 171191 n Tr JU Lots 115/116. llS XI SO ll'IC S2 to S5 ll'IC 67 to 19 Inc, 10 lo t6 LocaltO on AP 1.U.161-04 togotl'lt<" will! 111 AP d 11..01 llalbN Tr Lot I !Ilk 7 Lot 2 tMAl--M•nitd Wiison 0 HUfllt'I' Jr el ~I AP 1J.IU Feddersen lloymond e AP '30-J.l..UI AP l~ltl JJ Tr llS Un Ill $10 04. ll'IC All In Ilk II u.40ll 74 wlfn an Uncl 1/1 1nl I" LOI I IJUot Blk 1 Ull IS .. ,. Mla-M•llUfte:l..,...!nt 0t H111tllnoton Bloc:h Clly Lot IS Blk 111 Tr $511 Lot U1 Unit 1141 of l"roltel AP 111-191-34 Tr 115 1.ol 113 $10 04. lltr Jomes 0 CNOI AP 111 ltl 1' Tr AP r.JI 9UIOI Tt '151 Loi 1 Unit I OI Pro-AP oll!l 116-02 l tlbol Tr Lot J !Ilk 1 COOi Alll!A ,.,. 1 Mgllt--M.an•gomtll/ Loi 11 Ilk 211 \711102 Located on AP 1~11 !O(ltllltr will! an AP 171191-311Tr115 Loh 1711128 U51) JM Lot JU Blk A. 13201 Itel Loca1.,i on AP 153-1•1.o..I to0e11M 121721 ,, (Ml 1-M1N01t ltobtrlt E Roy AP 23-161 15. H....,_. Und 11123 In! 111 Lois B I to B 7 Inc 1. AP 111 191-lt, Tr 115 Loh 115/12'/UO AP 142 ltl 2l Tr 19I Loi 'II !Ilk ti Sl5 06 ""th an Urn! Vo Int In Lot I LlU 09 r AP • 116-03. Batboe Tr I.of 4 !Ilk 1 Lots 5 lrvlnt Co 01 W VI &for Snrdtt II~ Mlr>-MlnlniJ or Mineral llna1on 8tach Clf'f' Loi 26 Ilk 11& Loi 21 Loll E 1 & E 2 tO(lell'lfr with 1n Uncl 1/JJD $1712 Cllurch Ctnlral B<1pll1! of Huntington AP t31 9:M\10 Tr '351 Loi 7 U"ll 2 ot p~ 11'>11 ' Blk 1 $721.lA G AP ·~ 111-01 Tr Ull LOI 11 IQfM.4. MIK--Mlr.cellineout Ilk 218 Sll' 02 Unit In Lois G/H 129164 AP 171 191.40, Tr lU Loi• 1:13 & 12' SlS ti Btetll !NO) AP 1'7 211"6 Tr 196 Lot I Itel Lo<:eled on AP ISJ-1614' IQOelll•r Jochlmltll Miki red Al" oll ISl IJ Rlrenlt Gtortlt Ill IJTJ, AP 4,.._ .... MIL-More Ill'" LMi Dl.,.,1llllld lloY•ltlts LIO tf 1t AP Grlm!haw Jotm E AP tlQ.Sl-:ZSO Tr AP 111-191 Q Tr US Lal 143 110 01 !Ilk B Incl Loll' 7 10 lo 21 Inc 31 )2 U Will! on Und 1/1 Int I" Lot 2. 131509 l1lbOI Tr E•1I Sidi A.dd Loi 11 Blk ll Tr '622 Lot tt, ~ ' (MMl-MAllRIEO MAN 2l-1M47 H1111llnaton BIKll Clly Loi'' Blk 5S81 Lot 250 Uni! 250 of Protect Loc1ted AP 171-1•1"' Tr 115 Lot ll2. SIOll,/; lo 59 Inc n lo 15 Inc 78 to 85 Inc fl ta AP '31..fJ..411 Tr 6)51 Loil Uni! JOI Pro. SI 1l7 S6 Irvine Co o1 W y 1 &lot Unr""'-Dwcr .. MM-Mlscellone<M; Maps. 215 Lot I Btk 215 MIU.Q6 on AP 14-42:11 I logetr.tr wltll an Uncl AP 111-191""'6, Tr 11S ~ 139 110 DI. 111 Inc 12l lo 131 Inc 150 lo 156 In< Ind Itel Lociled on AP JU.16!41 tooefller Pulli.kl !toity H AP • ll2 11 Tr n1 A~ AP di 1»-07 fr "2' LOI MR--MlsceUantOUi Record1 f ul1on Harry C AP 2J..-19110 Tr Q16 1/11l lnr In Lois BI 10 B 7 Inc g. Lots EI AP 171191-ll Tr llS Lot Ill. SlOOI.. All Lo!• U T lo 163 Inc ·E• SI All in Ilk wlllt on Uncl Ill Int In Lott, Slll.O'I LD11 21122 Ilk M 1111.23 lrvln1 Co 1../or SIVIOf oc!.ia~!r (MSl--MARltlEO MAH SEPARATE Loi I 1111 Surtoc1 I. 500 Fl Sulllurl•ce & E 2 IQll!!llMr with 1n Und 1 /3)0 Int In AP 171191-'8 Tr 113 LOI 137 !10 04 II GS2 21M.76. AP '31.f3.012 Tr '351 Lot l Unit , OI Pro-ZI-Eddll W IJTJ, Al" •U?.(11 Tr 151 711 U Tr 61Sl Liii JJ. 1121 Cll. Mla--h\0.-1!11111 v4!rtlc1Uy of Par $65011 Lois G/H s:l'..,6' SZatlO E)lller F Tr AP 171-211"°2 Tr ir(OI Jtwt It AP 1422124' Tr'" le<I LocatMI on AP ISJ.161.(M 1 llllr Sll Loi "n !Ilk D ll02.11 Smltl\,. G1ry J IJT) AP • Mu11-Mvn1d110I L11sk Hornn.J.·H,111Hngton Stacllff {PT) Smllll Aoberl E , AP f»SA--266 Tr SS81 lU Lot1 1 lo I Inc I. 11 139 14 Loi !2 S537 to wlltt 1n UNI I/I Int In Lot 2 '31~ McCoy Rablrt IE ISE) AP d 2T1 1' 1021 LOI 11 SI OS1 "I 'lf-J.o.t4 Tr (MVJ--MIXEO VEST INGS (ti 11! AP 'J3.'12-l) Ex 100 ... Int In Min R1s LOI 266 U11ll 166 of Prolect L00tted on AP Smith Scott L AP 17123'!-0S Tr :J.j9 Acmra Mlch<1tl AP l~JJl2.(16 Tr l19 AP 931 n.G1• Tr 6JS7 Lot 2 Unll 4 Of Pro. Tr'" Loi 39 S\.'I Ind N\'I LO'I M) $4d 52 Smlln OWl11h! H /JTf AP 4X 1':14 (MWl-MARAtEO WOMAN bll!M 500 Ft Tr MSl Lot 100 Po.-Of Loi ltJ.o'll I l~her with 1n Und 1/123 t"t In Loi II !Ilk G 110219 L°{.1110bll';:4 :.,,, J I I AP IU 212 2l lfC:! t.ocllld on AP 1531'1.(M tog..,.... LlrMl!I Tiiford AP '82n"'9 Tr ... Lot Tr JO'l't LOI U M'3.U ' N--Norlh S5 «I Lot1 BI IO 8 7 Inc I. Luis E 1 • E 2 Wong ltobert K AP 171232-0I Tr 349 T 1;; 12 on t 1 wltll 111 Und 111 Int In Lot I &315.ot l1 UM lf lrvlnt Co of W Va 1./0' OrJN« N10-Nlllon1I Ll"n Minon C (WS) AP 1'-011-oJ logt!lll« wl!ll an Und l/J:ll Int In Lott LOI S Blk G $105 3l ~rtlc~::ar :::.;:,, A "p IQ 2t4-0I AP tll n.o21 Tr ll57 Liii J Unit S of Pro. ~';"1:1-DEl~1'ZZK7, AP 4I ll2 n, Tr Sll How1ro AP ~163.ot Tr 1019 Lot .JL NE~ortllcrasl H1111llngton Be~cll City LOI 22 Bit •14 G/H \221 97 l(ronlck Harry S ti al AP 1782'1.0I Tr ,ISOLot 77111l.'2 Itel Locatld on AP 1.U.111'61 tog111>tr T II L N "p 48 JJ2~2 SJ10'7 NEtv-NortllNiltrlY SlSIOI E~ 100-. Int In Mon RI$ Tr 14 Lot I 81~ ll cnrvsltr llNlfy Corp fClll AP U2-Ul wlllt •II Und \" Int 111 Loi J. SJIS ot T ~~er n~,Oi\ -;z;~· Cottle Alll!fl 0 IJT f AP ~ m IJ, Tr Nly-North,rt~ Hunnicutt Newell B AP 2•.016-12 H1.1n CODI! AllEA 4.(11)5 Por of Loi $?•SA 16 02 Sec; ll T S It II Pot SE'M. U TO SI AP t31-9>.o72 Tr t.lSl' Loil Unit 6 DI Pro-rSllll 1~ B I L ti t AP o(t-oJ.l IO 1ll2t LOI JI W5910 No -NumDer flnglon Buch CllV LOI S Blk 513 lot 7 81k Slmt Es1'Ue E AP 111251.()1 E• 1111Yt IC Itel Locoted Oii AP 1S).l"-D4 !offihlr we llt 1 t lrvtne Co Ill W VI 1./0f' Dtl'lti. 0..,,.. fN Dl-NO VESTING Jll. Ull l'O !myth, Jessie f tt •I AP lti>-200~ '"' In Min 1tt1 Below SOO Ft Tr 16 LOI l 1l~c T~n7.ltont~llCl~:I C~~ :;',I0'!2 ':, will! In Und \" Int Ill I.of J. lllS 09 ~"bt~ lo HtwllCll'I Hel911h LDI IS Blk C AP lSl->TI 26, Tr 611) LOI 2S ll.',W.i:I. (NRJ ~OT RESl!!AftCIEO Gi1IOt e.m.ird P J AP 1"'°71..(11 H...,,. Sec 3' T 5 A 11 N lit Fl E\.J SE .... NW\• Blk 1' H 2'4 ll Fl f); $\.'>. 1629 rn Storogt Soact A of Prull'CI Loe: ltd AP '31~1 Tr '3S7 Lot l Unit I of p,. GoOOn'll M ol (UWI AP 41..(1.fl '3 NT 1.. SA-N1TI0111l Tr\ISI 6. 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E• 100--. lnl 1n Min Ills !lelow 500 Gisler Htrold AP ISJ.On.o'.1 Tt 502• Itel Loc:•IMI on AP 153-1"--0' lootlher Add to NeWllOrf HtlOhh Lot I Ilk 2• '1 l«.11 Rd--AOild llfl(lton 8~cn City Loi 7 Blk 110 Loi I 81k T S R 11 NV. HE'ii SEl.lo SEV. S711 '6 Fl SK 2' T J It 11 Trl11111 LCll 111 HEV• Lot 69 $311 n will! 111 Und Ill Int In I.Oii .. SJU09 Wl2 73 Rtelo119--Rt.'Clenoul1r 110 1903 12 Loumen1 P1111 P , AP 111110-16 NW • Sii 90 Crol-11 J•mts * AP I.SJ.On 15 Tr lllflll"'I" Cllrllll111 AP ff.(16,1.j).I, Tr Rtiub--llnvtldlvlsfon AP f+.124-16 Hunllnglon Btacll Crtv Lei 8 G<1rfle1d Slrffl Add Lui 24 Blk E ™' 10 JOhlliO!t BrllCe K AP 171.:11 ... 12, Ei S026 Lot 36 $11016 ' COOi! AlllEA ...,.2 tit LOI S Bllt l. U9tl 14 CODS All l A 7441 RllY-R .. lty !Ilk 107 lo(t7 04 AP 111110 23 Gtr'llekl Street Add Loi 15 100% lnl 111 Min Rff, 8elow SOD Ft Tr 5132 Bank, Cr0Ct1t.Cllliet1s Nitlonal Tr ti Ill Poae John H •AP o(t,OU.IJ Tr flt Loi Rn">--lloom McPhenon.. let> V Jr ""° 1._1,2-02. Ex Bl-E Ei~ of Lot 113 96 Loi 11 11 SU 40 (MY) AP lSs-oN.JO Tr J024 Lot «J S G T J Ilk l, "61 o(t lrvlnt Co !Cit ) AP 4'7-011 Ro-Rane no 1~ ll'! '" Mfn ltts Hu111fnglori Be.-cn Cl Cll<1lfln Dorlt 0 "' al AP 1111;"1).16 Niche/ Frt11k E er II ,.p 171315 3' MOS 67 AnOenOll lonley AP l11-5l2-oT, r Sh.sfer Jol'llts L. AP 4t.ctr6l 10 First SUO Lot Blk 51 Por of I '' lrvlllO 1tO\o-Rar1ChOS 1y Lot 22 !Ilk lO:S Lof 14 Blk :m $1'293 Garflekl Slrll't!t Add LOI 6 Blk find LOI / Ell 1000.. Int In Min ltt• Below 500 Fl Tr AP lSS Ill l4. Tr S071 Lot ll '84.l ll 21 LOI' Ilk 412 '3al t] Add to Newport Htlghh Lot IJ Bl~ 11 11• Ul.05 l~ Ind Ll'or 1111 n. Rll:-'!:1llrood or R..,...al Routt AP 1+1l2-oJ E:ic l~ 1111 In Mln Rh Blk F "81 51 S2" Ler 37 AH fn<: Adlte:ent W'lwtrl•11• AP ls.I 11119 Tr 5027 Lot 19 S750 llO • O E TY IN $106.)'11 AP "1111.JJ Tr nt) Loi Q. SJd A S -tl:llCOfd ol Survty Himtlntlon Beacll Clly Loi 20 Ilk l OS John1on Cllltrlat It IJTI AP 111110 18 lllgh!s In I Defined Ario ol «:IO fl Cllln AP 15S-112-CM Tr 5027 Loin, Silt.JI rR p R Warner ltlchlrd H AP 4'.01115 Tr 77 Murr1y Ellrtbttll W cwsr Al> Rt--ltoull 111163 G1rtltld Slreet Add Loi 4 !Ilk F 1102 Oii nel Sii •t AP 178--021-02 U 261 SI AP 1SS-ll2 ii Tr 5027 LOI oC6 $$15 11 NEWPORT IEACH CITY Lot 1 Blk 1% All Inc SWty 10 Fl of 442 121..(12 Tr m:> Lot 11 US..l:l. ltt,._lllgh11 Pllllll. Ltllll W AP 2._10 14 Hun 1(0111 Oevtloome111 Corp, AP 111121>-29 Bender Eugtne C AP 171-315-tl Ea Ol,ktV llontld AP 15J.121-0S. 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Tr flll" J W, Al" ~ Tr 712 Lot 10 def Mar Lot ll Ilk 32' f4t1 f5 Tr 6Q4 Lot 1, $Sf0,64 ' Sp.-jt»Ct Therrol' W AO Ft Loli I & 3 Ilk t1X1 W 3" LOI I) Ilk J 114.11 AP 17146Ull), $114151 .57'5 Loi '4 Pfl/f of Loi' Ind Por of Lot 65 llrt U All •E"K $Wly l't Fl llld SWIV lt HlrbOr DtY kllool ICIU AP S1102-02. • SPRR-$ov1herrl !"Kiiie: 1l10rOld ,, , Fl Ex s I• "' I! 22.J fl Lot I Blk Foley E"• "' al (NO) AP 111).(12111 Salllllen Ar'"*" N AP 171311--01 Ell p M ... ,, Par 1J. tl,OJ:IN Fl LOI 11 !It~ 25, "13.n ,., .sn Loi 1 lllk L All IEx Hwy U.Gr6' 10 Sq-S.quMt 101 W 615 fl LOI J !Ilk m, 1310 $). Tr~ LOI 1 lllk J Sin 2.S 100'\C 111! l" Min Rh !lltlow JC0 Fl Tr 5050 Vlll11oY01 LO 11I1 A AP 151 Ill 1CI Sltnol ProHf'lltt tllC (Clll &/or "'"""'" G I (HO), A,. Jl 10).lt, COD• AllaA '"'" $t-SlrM1 lltd<lV Lidlsl•w "p 24 221.(12 VIiie dil Slldoltkl Gotdon AP 110.0U.10 Tt lit Loi •8 AU (Inc Ad[Ktnl W/\trf<1114! Alo/lb Tr 6'nl LOI ' 11,176 tL LtlbtcC CH AP u-(ISl-35 Tr 1n lot 17 C~ det M..,. 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LOI 27, UC.I•. f'l~tlM;k. C.hartn J. Tr,, •I (MV), AP AUOC:IATEl •• eanartl ~m""'' n. "· and $tpl•~ s. 12. _,_., Han,., L ..... , 111.-1:s, Tr ltn AP 11$.-160-07, l r IS& L.ot l w M) Fl N l:unctbttg, sor'" CMI:) AP' 11,.llWI. Or-V1Ll•r .._,,.,, l\KAtllon 11N3WS. Tr '°' Loi 11 All •fix NE!y "° H•tMrll\lo, •• • 2'0l-n ~t~· '541.AS. u .... ''· ut.JI. -,, U'9 L.o! 1 All .... Hwiv "1.S ,., .. CODI ,.. ... IMM Aili! \NOi. AP 9'31 ... 492. Tr 6111:1 l.ot I fl $£1\' UD Jt1 •• 1114.0.. QtMral P'rtntf' Sa111lrnan, 1•"""'1. A,. 111..JU.CM, Tr AP u s-1.0.11, Tr 15' LOI• Trlaftf111tr L.ot NEl'f' s.i.:13 f't-. u11.... and Lot c common ArM L.ott ot Pro!~ Tl!'•ENCE w. 9JUGKAM PUBUC NOTICE ~ Let J, U2t,77. In Lot, UJ,Jf. W1rr1n. W•l1K• w. (MS!. A,. 11t·ll3· C•varw1119l'I. l •OOll.l (MS!, AP Ul·ZM<OI. L.Kaltd on A• l.W.291'°2. U:0.11. PIOPllTY IN Attor,,.'f'-ln>F KI l1t1llmln, .. OWtrd ~.,AP 117.JU.07, Tr l••cll•• W•rt itn E. at al, AP 11S-J02"3, "' t r 1'17' Loi I POI" ol LOI, Wl,26, Tr 2'ff L.rrl 21, Slt,.lol, OrMn VaUI'/ NIN'lbll" r-(f'Tl •P Thlt ittltll'ltlll w•• 111'4 w1Th Iha Coun• ,ICTIT'IOUS IUllflllff 1'"'"~:ic.,'H= h.ch co lf'TI AP tr f1 L.rrt ''All ·E• 11 .. ,, ... 10. H11n1, H•roio, AP 11t-1Uo39. Tr l•lt L.ot coo• AllA 1...._. m .1).-(M. Tr mo Loi ti tt ,.;.,.,ct HUNTINCiTON IEACH 1y c1tr11: ot On• covn1y °" A1111n1 NAM• nATIMallfT' delng l'z-':l7~i~. ': ~ ~&1~1~i~i;n. L~•;:r~G~~ ~11~e~:.~s.11~i;..,T;,! 1 ' Jr.~;·:; L. .. Af' 11,.1,,.20, Tr XIII LOI 101 T•rt•n Homa• Inc ictti AP lO.JJMJ, ~~~1.1~~,1=1~ l!!!~ Arta SCHOOL DISnlCT ~1~7! •· Lal"IMN. AflY-~~~~:.; ~: T ;r; A 111 c 8 l'!' 111 $61" T -l.ol l. 11 11' • Fl S!'IY is. fl -E• Por to Sl•lt ot C•llt IWly IOO Ft HWly 450 fl SEly '°1·2 "'· 'fr O U Lot,,. MOI ., L.ot A 01 ProlKt 1.0etltd on AP' ltM\:ll-IS. .t.4•""· IP..-... M....... $E!JIVICES, 612 A Hall'llllon st .. C.• AP' 1114.1~ T~ l6G6 LOI ,, :1:1u::: -4$W4'1 01\•, $t6.$..W, "'J~~ .>.Oii E Jr AP 11,.lt.).02 Tr ' , • '11~t. COOi AlllA...... ti:. ~~~t~:.=1 tlOI' MitW, Ctllf. '21127 Af' 111~1~1 , T'r :wot L.ot ), tl.111.'2. l{aflOld, Wiiiiam A. IJTI, AP' 115-162·16. 1171 Lot 2, 171.JI.' ' ' COOi AleA IHU COOi AalA ti.. Ouesl. Wit""tl H. t i 11, AP 11t·S1S·l2, P2JMI Earl M, P1uquet, 611 A Hafft!llOll St .. Af' 111 ... 1.U. Tr -Lott. 11.111.n . Tr' l.ot ti ,.., " Loi, s1.t 1 .. n . CUy ol Cotl• MIU {XXJ, AP Ut.lf.>22, S11t1~ IMch L.ot I I lk 123, $42'.U. 1-.0C: Cosi. ...... M. C•llt. 91'71 'CMMnn, ltuTh M., A,. 1174924), Tr Nthon, Clllr• M., ... ,. llWU.16. Tr 1002 Tr ,7. LOI II sw1., 200 Ft ·I!• NWly 120 Sttoal•, Jl otioert w .• AP 119.,.1·•· Tr ... , il'I kl Sid M (Jf) AP' lff.232<03. Tr AP 111"'1i-lt. SullMI ltlCh Loi 3 I lk IU P11bll"*9 Or•~ Co.~t O•llY Pilot, T-.1 l".uquat, 6lt I H~l!Orl ,, .. .. L.ot '· MH.liO. Loi 1 e I» Ft w 266.t Fl ·E• w t6 ffl•, Fl .. SElv t20 Ft .. NEIV SD, Ft·, $27Je, LOI '· ss.i1.a:s. • • l. :I: '. ' •nd L.ot 5 Blk 12). rtM.oa. A11111ut1 2t, itlld Saptembilr s. n. If, Co.1• Nina, C•llf. 11•77 -'"'!~ ~Otla.", •• .. · ... (JT). A" 111·tt4-4Q, ,, sm.v .. ,, J ••••• AP 11·-·.:1:1 Akan-. Elv•. AP 11 .. 1~1, Tr 11• Loi T:t~~j·j!,L·u~~,w),,UAP.,~1!; .sse'1a~0.:.i..1 ~n"J. (JTI AP 1•Nl>l0, f'IMclf'ICI•, AnlllOtly t i •I ITC), AP lt73 2'9).1~ Tiii• bu•lnau .. CondlK'-d bY. t«t••I --• · tn par, • · • ..-.-• 11 HEly M I'! USl .62 T ' IO. JM. ' 1~ Stmt.-1 8t«t\ L.ol 2 Ilk lit Plr1,,.rllllp. lkloM. O•n1 AP 111"41).14. Tratt 4911 f•lr'll-F•rrn1 Lot 14 ht ot L.M (f' M Dovlt . Frln-M. •I ii (MV ), AP' \lf..311. L.octttd on AP' 11'-»142 tooaThlf" with •n r1~ '°', .... ~ H, •• ·--Ii Tr "°1I'-' E•rl M.. I'~ LOii, iL 11,m .11. t s.SO P•r A), S2.ttl.1L lS. Tr lOO L.ol POI' ot Allan SI. Adi L.o! Und -" 1111 In Lllh 16.llla., t.US.22. •-· ......... •• ~ • AP ln.&~ SUNtt 8t&eh Lot 1 I lk PUBUC NOTICE Tiil• •1•1-nl w•1 lllad wllh rrw COi.in> M!-ra, Gtor•ld f', lJT!, AP 117-01.(16. Tt Af' l\J.-JM-2 .. Fal"'taw fftrlM lot 14 PW IU Un ": LOI ~· ::·::· tleor Two IPTl AP llt II US.fl l'f' Cl..-k of Ot•nos Cour'lfr on Auo1.11I 2o. "''Let •• 1itn.zs. ot L.ot (PM &JO f'ar I J, ll.oN.JO. ' . ' COOi AllA lMM ftl.::,, 1Tr 6t'/OvmL.fll S1 ot Pr°oiat H~t.' AH1.i J .. AP IJl·SU.01, SunM1 ,ICTITIO\IS IUSINlfSS l'13. .... irv:~..a&~f°'~r ~ JllllW ?-· ,.::··,..~~-: .. w '!: ... 1;~ COOi ....... IHIJ Jt1>1n Golf P't'llft'lollOl'I tU s At Inc: ICll:). loctittitl on A~ ,.,.2'1"2. Al'-'7. Blkh Lot. I lk 16• SJSJ.Xl. NAME STATIM!lllT h blll.htld Otanoe Co.11 01Uy ~1~1,~ 1~,,. C• ;.,,OI' Ob on. o.r.icil2t,':..~ ,, .,. Sit-, llU.111. Jt11t1n Ooll Pnwnotlon (U s Al In<: AP 1•111.01. Alllft Tr IAt f'or ot $«:1 ...!'riNo~·t~~ .~=."'T: :a,~tt;:" A:·r=~,..~~·21 .. t:n22A•~1k1c4i~: TM fOUowtne par110tr 11 00!119 bu•lneu ~~· 22. :n. and S.P!ffl'lbar, 5, 12 111.,.01, Tr 4224 Lot ... 11,IOf,M. J-. Rlctltrd • CJTJ, AP' llS.JOl•21, (C JI J, A, 13fo111.0., &tc a T 6 JI 10 ,,OI' 4/S T' fl 10, ml.V . 111 • 1 S11l 9t ti. V 25«3·73 Ca!Wrl, Mllai I',. Al'-ll1·1IS.lJ, Tr S21T Tr Yl LOI ti Ill! i. U lt.07. and POI' of &tc J T ' It lG Sl'KIWt! &I n .tt AP 13'·111.(l'J, S« J T ' It IG a Strip ot C-l'l'IOl'I Art• Lot of ProfK Loe•'" Ol'I L.ichttrl8"'. Hi!'ll"I' II t i, AP l1l·S32·l7, HEAVE NL. Y BODIES, ltll .,-1----::".'.'.'.:CC".'.":--,.,.,.--,.,,.---- L• l, t.lU.JS. Cron. Oon o. al 11, AP 1!$-301 ... , Ac MIL. P•rc11 !n S.C&, '1"'°7J.a, Land '°Fl wldl In SK, IJO.JI. AP l.,.2'\4?, W .ll). Tr "' LOI 12 Blk 212 and l r 21 NEJ~ 40 p~~ 1'E1ns~:kvi~::' (Edvo••d) JID PUBUC NOTICE ~n. Jotl11 ,., ti •I (Pll, AP "•lrvltw Farrn1 LOI 11 E 107 f't H 1tS.n E TY IN PR~RTY IN Fl Lot n Ilk 112, ml.ff. v .... no p~. lrvt,.. C• """ • 1---:=:::::::-:,.,.-====---...,...,, 't" 5'" U11lt 1 OI Proltct LO' fl WY:t ·lb H n Ft & s u.n Ft I. ti., COOi Alt•A IMtt PROP I ...,... Slvtraon, WllHM'I R. Jr CMS), AP llll• 111111,,.~; 11 c~MI arr '" in. NOTIC• TO c••DITO•s ai... ..., AP nr..m~. IMl.M. $211». ITY IRVINE CITY trt-134.lL SUNlt &Nth Loi I lllk :u. dtvldwl SUl'•ltot: cOU•T Qf' TN• Hlan. OOrO!tl'f' M., AP ll~tL Tr i25 OOUolllY. Johnnla I. n.tw1; A, 11~1-.jl, FOUMTA.IN VALUY c U2t.14. jotln E ,..,.,kYI•" STAT• 0,. CALll"O•llltA PO• COOi AlllA 14f1 LOI • All ·E• tiwy .. Sl,o90.l1. tr U)I Loi '· W7.t 7. -AP 11f.Ul-1l , Sun!otl Bel ch L.or :s lllk Th\1 •l••~rmn, Wt l tit~ With IM c-· TH• COUNTY Of' OltA.HO• J-5, OGvaL•• E. (JT), AP 115'311•26, COOi AltlA 21•11 COOi AllllA ,... "'and Loi J l!Uk 114. 11,116.,1. ,.., Ci.rk ol Orf1119e Coun!v on JlllV 2.. N .. A•7Ult 6wtl. G. I~ (JTJ, Af' 111~·11, Tr 21 .. L.ot 10, '621.6'. COD& Al!A IHM l(u"k•I, Wllll•m H.. AP 111·JJ6.l6, lt1J E•ttla ot STELLA D. MIL.O, al .. known Tr 11N L.OI l:t, U11.#. FtlUlll, JOMl!fl L., AP' 11WU4', UM Dllmlf O AP ll'M71.0. Tr~ $11ddlebacll lnvntll'ltnlt (f'TI, AP Sunwl 8eod! LOI 1 &lk 112 J EIY • l"I . "11t\J •• STELL.A DEL. MOHTE l'tlL.D, OK11i.- " • l'lll'YllW l'1mu L.OI u Nly 50 l'I '"' uo Hllfnor Entarprt ... Cot!• Miii (P'T ), Lot 11' I U "° " . l!M411).11, Tr 192 Lot E2 SEtyl'll .inc ,.. aflCI SEIY 41 Ft Lot ' Blk It,, M22.62. P1.1bll"*' Or1nga Cott i Dtll'f' Pllol, ad. ~I AllA ,.... Ft WIY ltcl 11'1 -i• SI•, taf.56, AP' tU·\04-14. Tr"" Lot I,, S\%7.U. , H d M ' ' Inc. AP' ll1...n.lt Tr l27t -.JW Adi-. S2.S5t.ot. Si1bo. E•lher ff. Tr, A,. 111-551-22. Auvvst 29, •l'ld lf!J._.,,bll" S. 12, 19, NOTICE-II MEltEIY GIVEN to tha T•IDOlt, l\obtort C., A,. 11~, Af' '12'112•, Tr ..,, Lot 10. $121.A ur ~ ' Al' 104-0JO.lf, Tf 212 lot l!I 1Ely!h .£it S1111tel lltadt Loi 1 Ilk 16' Mid Lot f I lk \Vil 2'90-73 crt(ll!Ol's ol' Thi .,._,. 11tmad dtoc.O.nl c.,...,,-. Johll T .. AP 111..Jt:l.ll, Tr l'alrvlWt F•rm• L.ot 2• H" ,, s m Ft City 01 C115lt MtM (XX), AP 4'1•11'"°2, L~ 15ti~n·T U73 lot SI II'-" NE!tv lJ Ft SElv 210 Ft., u .w.111. 104. M1•.JI. lh•l •11 polr-Mvt119 tlalm• ev••mt the UG I.at '-'• 1311.10, E :tn5 l'I W :lllt,j Pt, UU.M. kc :U T S R 10 Por SEV., $11.31. "N llonll -o' r !Cit) j.,. 161.o,1-0't Af' 104..(llO«I, Tr 211 L.OI 01 NWIY ,12 (Ol"c0t•n. lt lchtrd G .. AP 111.jtl.JS, Tr 1111d dKtdtfll •re rtq1.1lrtd to fllll them, vawM, ,.,111 A., AP' 11s-m-1•. Tr 1m s.c•ao Ts R,~"s:w\4 Hwv. SW\4 ea' Ac #'Id swtv 1.1• Ac Lot 012 Mid All ·In<: 21 LOI IS Blk '1s, Sllt.10. PUBLIC NOTICE :i lh 1111 ntcn w•v 'o'OUChlr1. In 1t1t otllc• Lot ICll, "°2.1'. CODlf AltlA 1...,,, St · $$.394 l6. ' f'a R/W AO .. , L.ol OlJ, ll.;ll.2t. lhe clerk of Ille abovt cnlltlad court, Of '191, Frank L.., Afl' 111411?"41, \01, t NWl'f' 6' flt, ll,OS2.$'l. P-. s.trah. AP 11.M\2.(M, Tr 1172 Loi .. • •• ,., .. 1.ot T .on r•o-•TY IN IO prtMnl lhtm, with !ht nttasY ry Tr l!St 210, tlJ0.38. Sia .. ot Cllllornlt Olv ot HW"f'I (X)(), J'"lll'I• Frtd D., ' r CODI AllA ,...., r-5 l'ICTITIOUS IUSIHISt (' 'IOUChtr1, let Ille \lfld..,lgnac:I •I ltlt ctlflc• Wiii .. lllcNrd f (JT I, AP ll~Sl-16. AP i.1.17142, Tr :lft1 Lot 7, 1lt.02. Loi 2'. Mii.Ji. SK :M OCEAN VIEW MAME STATIEMINT of 1111 A"ornty• s._ and Snow, 12011 San Tr , ... ·Lot "· 52'2'.n . AP lll·J11.fa. Tr.,, L.ot" 111.2'-T "'i'r:~· ~"':: =;· :" x::1~:s:i..:. SW\lo Vande-man, How•ttl s. (JTJ, Af' "1-scuooL DISTRICT TM followlng par.om .,. clolno lflctfllt '°""""•rel. Sul!• N11mDlfl' m L.os . (dDI AltlA ,....,. Concord lnYftlrntnl Co, AP' 11~21, ,..,. 141·2714', lr "'' L.ot s, Sll.4. 022.1,, Tr 6Ut Loi 12', 1'21.•. f1' bl.Illness a1 : Af'IOl(M, Ca11fomla t!IOlt, """'ell 111 11'1• Tr lfM LOI 21, Utl.3'. AP 141·27a.Jt. Tr )tt? L.o1 f Pot ot Loi, SE W.. "14.». . MlkhelL, A. OWaln (JT), A,. ""°"'''°• VISTA DEL LAGO, 2775 ~ V.,dl olac:I crf Minni of ltlt unc:I~ tn all M11lltvy, 0.Vld, AP' llfJll-4:1, Tr '1a Grttnw•, Mfflllllll t., .AP' 11 .... :t-2 .. $17.00. 1111,,.._.n,, G¥'f O., A,. 167-ltt-l•, Tr Tr 1011 lof n, "".XI:. COOi A•IA 7Wlt Dr!v• Etl!, Cosl1 Mlwo, 0 11fOl'nlt 11.o!U "'att1r1 Ptrt•lnlng lit the Ml•!• Oil 1ald Loi 1, ws,.11, Tr 1112 Loi m "5IO·"'-AP Ul-mJS. Tt lt'7 Ult 11 Pot Of Lot, ..,, L.ot M, 1712.30.J A,. 161_1~ Tr Ollvar, wnnam M. (JT), AP' '4t·122·11, ConnKllcut Otr!lt•I Lil• lnsur•oc• dtttdtnl, within four montflt anw l"9 : Opf9r1Mt1, W1111fffl W .. AP 11S.S171·1.C. Tr lltM. Crvn\tlV, H~ ·• Tr 1234 L,ot n, IJ1•.S6. GregOl"'f', J-A., A,. 107~1·11. Tr CotnNny, • 0.llwtr• COl'POflllon, 900 first P\lblk aflon ot lhll notlct . (OM Altl.t. 1-eQ 1112 L.Ot J1.C. SJJ0.11. AP 1.i·272'11 Tr »t1 L.ot 11 Por of Lot 41'-' lot JO. "°'w '~ 167 IU.ll Tr D22 lnlltll Co (Cltl, AP ..... 201-15, Tr 1'lfll l114 Lot '3, "504. COll'99' Gnw• RO.O, Bloomlllld, Con. Oalad A1191J1,I l•, lt'7l Cory, TNodOl't E., AP' 115--'D·IJ, Tr •1tA. ' ' Wood, •!Ml " ' ' L.ot 1, US0.24. TlfTIO, Wl'f'f\t O., AP' 107..J7"°5, Tr 37"3 nKTlcvt 06002 MAIUC: WIL.LIAM HILD, Jlt .. ltvlna C• .. ,., MCC.orkla. Owtfl c .. AP 1712 L.ot ""· ttct.n . AP 141·tn..,,, Tr,..., Loi 12, S20.t0. Loi I!. s:in.lt . ,. 1Q-tt14' SK l..,ltt .. $o!\I of C•I Inc. (Cit), AP lot :n. 164.0:. l hlt bullnt» 11 bl1no conc:lvded by • E~«vtcw of''-Wiii ~2'411. Trad'°" Lal ''· u2 .. 21. im! ....... COii• E .. AP' 111-514-27, Tr 1712 Riti#:lfll. LOlll• t4., AP 1•1-2'2.ti. 111'"1' •1sr1; J:.' r. •.:JM~~\, ... 12,0.14.•1 • Ut-252-0A. Tr .m LOI lt, .... 01. P\11:1111'-<I Otano• Coe1t on, Piiot COl'pot•lfon. of Ille •boYI ntmtd dtocldmt 1,....IM Co I.Jot a&Kkbunll, WlltltlTI C .. Lot 2ta. tm.61. t, Let 1 Ilk I" Trlang 1..Cl AC In Loi, • ' AP .... 252'°'• Tr 6t23 Loi 1.C. SK.01, A119111! 2f and Stplarnbw $, 1f73 'U45·73 CONNECTICUT GENERAL StilOW AND SJllOW, .• Aft~. ff'9Cf Mii Ltol u. 11.21».10. Alrnonc:I., Lathan G .. AP II~ Tt $27'.73. coot: A•IA ti-AP 4'9·2S2-1.C. Tr tm Lot,, SK.01. L.lfE. IHSUltANCE COiloPANY 124111 1111 Vk9tJl9 IWl•••rll. ,. 171 2 L.ot llO, U.W.CI'. 1tal11klng, Lou11 H. INltJ, AP 1'1·1t'l·IS, AP ut-U3-JI, Tr 6n:J LOI"' SM.01. PUBLIC NOTICE I Y: RIV D1kln, Mgr . Sulla N......, In COOi A•l.t. ,.... 1 ... rr Tr Loi J Blk F POI" o1 Lot and POI' I tl'l, Arrdil A. A, 111-112-41, fr W • AP .ut-t5WJ. Tr 6'l3 Lot 70, $96.01. Tiiis tla .. menl flltd with tlllt COllPlly LM A ........ C.tllwlll• ttMt • r COOi M.IA tl-tt1 o1 Lot' Ilk p, U,l»..44-" SI "· ' A,. ..,..J».42, Tr 692:1 LOI 77, S'6.01. Clark of Or .. ,ve Countv on : A119, 11. \9n. Tat: (JIJI C1M.lU ...,_, Jwry A. AP' 11W1141. Tr -. Loi ,5. ot6'ca11•11la Dtv., Hw'f'• 1x:ic1 AP 4'9.!Sl-6S. Tr 1923 Loi 100.-196.01. fllOTICI IHVITIHO •tos By Tl'lrtr•Mi M. Ward. O.Pl/IY CWl'ltv At,_.,. .... !•.cvltir 'Lei·¥, \1,2ill.n.. ' Holtlldtr, Olr• M.. (WOJ. AP' 111·10t-CODI A•IA IMJt ...:I~~ 5'12-413 S.C-:U l J It. II Pot NE1' Afl' "'"'2.S.1-n. Tr "7J Loi 107, 196.01. Nollet ll hartlw QIVMI th.ti! IN loerd ol Ciftk PUOllM>td Drt"lll Coast 01Uy Pile!, "C:OOI A•U HO "· H•rPtr L.ol 16 lllt A Naty JO.U Fl . 'oo 11Sll.., Oil 11.5.60. AP «f·tsl-73. Tr "73 L.Ol 1M. tM.Gl. Tn11tett of tht Coe1t Camrnunlty CollliG"f ,.111 .. Augu1 t IS, :u. ,,, and S-srtamblr s, Swty ll0.15 Fl SEly 'KID Ft, t.:n0.11. o. Fllllpph JOMPll. A,. llJ.30..IJ T• .. : I~ L (HO) Aft ii2..ui.a Tr AP ...,_J.S3.7', Tr Mn L.rrt 114 S9'.0l. Olllrlct ot Or•ntte County, CalUornl•, win Publllhcd Or1noa Coest Dally Piiot, lt73 2$51-73 Franlllln. Sallm H, II •I, A,. 117-lOMf, •n Loi 2 Ilk 8 All ·E• W 160 Fl·, f.210.U. n, ~ti ' ' A,. Ul'-"3-IO, Tr '923 L.ot 115, •tt.OL r.celw -ltd bld1 wp to 11:00 1.rn., Mlln· AU111.11I tt •nd Sttt!~blf' S. 12, 19, • ,...,,,...1111, A. A. Jr, AP' J).(02.0S. 9tlOOt Tr W Lot 10, '207.... Pollan!, Challar A. 11 •I, A,. 11W44-U. S21S L.rrt Ml, • 0 A~ 1IJ"6l-"• Tr l(ef!t, l\lclllrd A. IJTI, A,. '51"32·10. Tr Qy, SIPll<nbar 17, ltTJ, al tri. Pl,ll'Cha1-197l 2691-n PUBIJC NOTlCE hl•nd RHlll:I * I Lot 1 Bl~ 'Md Lot 2 AP 111·111Mt1. Tt M1 Loi• 11/12. $.l.tll.31. Tr 6121.ot 11 Ilk E All -£• Sl1-, MM.SL Hlcu. Ravrnon,. " MS7 Lot U, s.a.n . ll'IO Dept. of ltld IChllol cflllrlcl loc1ltd .,, _______________ "---""'"""'"""""""""'~--• ••k 6 u so.. Goodwl11. ClllrMf o .. ..... 111-11 .. 11. p I I tto (JT) AP 11~ l ,,, S21S Lot S2, .,,. ' 10I' lrvl,,. Co of w Va .,.,, Spragut, JIOOtt 1310 Adami AvanUI. CO.I• Mh•, I P'ICTITIOVS IUllN•ss . 1: 1~~:1:Vo -:.··i t= ~; ~s~i:~1.;*·Fc~::; Lo~l~;:"~!n!~ ~~;,i.o;:,.~i~;UL L~~~,.;.: :::·1::.:..~ ~,?.r~1:-'~~~t~ s: l:,. 21 ~I~ ~=~:t~il:'?r:;!: ~!Jl i: PUBUC N011CE Thi 1o1r:,: s1i!~=··~r• do<ng ''::!;,"·JIO/Oltf1 " AP »00-fl • lbM 111·116<20, Tr,,, L.OI :s Blk c. S14«1. :;1~1awStF•::n:...L~ "' NV. E .. Ft w. et'S ·-lrw: (CJI), ... ,, 112·791.(11, Tr '920 lrvlnt Co of w Va &.frtr Karam. Fouiad All blch .,. to bl In ICCOl'd•nc• wllh I ,.,. ""',"r,:ET·s.;.. RO•• ••DDUCTS CD/'· '° ' " • • .,....,, Jlldlard J .. AP 111·11 .. U, Tr ~77 x ., -· · LOI C, n .4G. . t •• A/I. t30-t5.(IM, Tr S1'I L.ot t• Uni! ft OI lntlrvcllct111 Ind Conc:llllGl'll a nd " b ltnll ltMUb Sec I Lot 12 Ilk 7, MU, ... L.OI I Ilk C HWly 50 Fl -Ex Nl!IY 130 Ft·, Wlnlar, Cecil, AP' llS.v.).(17, Tr JIO Lot AP 1lf.7'l•l7, Tr '920 lot 9, lf.60, l'ro!Kf L.ocat.0 on Al' 453.(Ml.J. ... 1.:H. SPldfkillorit whld! ira iww Ol'I tlla t nd FICTJTIOUS IUllNl:ll PANY, 2902 Flol'lda S1rnt, H11nt11111t°" ~·-~n, HOVI S. CJTl, AP '°'°51·11, l6l•lO 16, UI0.31. AP 112·7'1-». Tr ff2(I Lot A, ffA(I, lr'llM Coot WY• &/Of" OH1.1, Nln<:y m1y ba &«Ul'ld In t ... offtc• of the NAMI STATl!M!NT Be1cll, Cl. 11641 lllbo9 1"9nd R .. 111> he I Lat 11 Ilk 11, w;i..niiton Wlltr J. (JT), A,. 117·1..,._ ll'tl.csrktlten, Harry H., AP' llJ.-Sn.07, Llno'lft.SOvthtm Cal!fOl'nla Inc ICI\), E., AP t»fS.lH. Tr J1M L.ol Its Unit 19J ,.llrclwslno ACMnl ot wkl school dlitrlcl. Thi following penon b dol119 b\J1ine11 St1nlay 0.1kovlck, 2I02 Florld;w ,.,.,,.. Tr Q7 W a uu 61 Tr nn LOI 11, US1.11. A~ 112...,...., Tr .m Lot A. sn.". Of l'TollCt Loc:attd on AP' ~1-3. SPKlflatlon forms. and complat• In·.,, Strnt, Hu11t1no1on Baach. Ca.,.,.... Pecll\c Co.it l'rult OlllflllllloB ti al Holr•, M. M. ' f)TI, AP IU-ISJ·1'' Foell, Donald C., AP 11J..•l.(lf. Tr .,, AP 112..eot-63. Tr "22 ,UI ft. t1Sf,tt. ll!»M. llrvdlmi ml'JI' ba otllilnacl al Ike Cll lSSM.ANS' RENTALS, 19Si Pl I Ctn· ltoblrrl ltlcfttrdt, 111 E. Mtl'(MI Ave., IMYI. AP' to-052·21, lalbol ............ "'""""°" H•latlh L.ol .., P'or In LOI, Loi 11;, UTl.lA. GtnlY, ltoblff J. CJTJ. Af' llMn.tl, Tr lrvlnt Co .. w V• &/Olf Hottman. Purc:hllllno Otopir1mtnl of""" Dlttrld •• ti•. Cott• MtMI, C•lll. t'l627 Wtll covr11a, C•I. ,,,.,., S4oc: l Lot ilO Ilk 9, 04.C. W 2.M), Ollftoll, OWltlhl M., AP llS.a24J, Tt Wll lot 211, •n.AO. TMctd-S., AP ~10, Tr S1'll L.o! 110 tri. •bova llcklr-. For ilddlllonal In· llt'(l"l'\Ofld M. Crlum1n, 170 Govarnor, Tlll1 bullnatl II conduclac:I b'f' a llMle<"ll arr.ti, HVW f ., AP' ~-ZS. l.t!IM ltlWOlfl. Arf1111r W .. AP' 117•111.(0, A.O. 111' LOI ft, SJ(».N. Otcklf, Gwta L , Af' 1°"6).01, IEX Unit 210 of ,,.lie! LoQt'4 on AP fotmatlon ot IMNcikln appolntinant, call Cosltl Mall, C•lll. f'l'21 perlntOhlp. • bllfild fttM l4c I L.ot a I lk t , $Jl1,.n, H•rrit lllb L~ t, U2t.6J. ~. Robtrt It. (HO), Al'-llS-:ff1. l00'4 Int In Min fl.ts Bllow 500 Fl Tr $195 UJ.611-l, ..O.U.C. Mr, Robar! C. Moor'I 17141 ISW'/'Si. Th11 butlnetl h btlng conclucted bY In Jlobar1 •lcllan:l1 y_.,, #Nry O~ Af' JHn.01. l•llloil Coaptr', Chlrlolt• D .. AP' 117·!11·11, Tr '°· Fllrvlaw' ,,.,_ Lot • ,.ot of Loi, Lot 61. $174.14 Lr"VIM Coot w V1 a.l ot •-no. John Each blddtr m\151 Mlbmlt With hi• bid I lndlvldull. I T~:· ~l•l~nl ....... tlltd With n.. Coyn. ....,._ • .._..Ste I Lot I Ilk 12, ~ ~Lob :WM ltll E 5'Ml..Jf IJ)J.O). Trl.c.Ollfttlas ptoPlrfl ... AP 157-054-11, I AP f»JH..1• Tr 921 I.of 1• Unit 1• ctsllltr'I dleck cartlfltd t htoc:k or bid· R. W. Crturn1n V .,. of •"""' C01Jrtly Oft A119111I 13, ,......... J.-T, H af al (J,.), AP T1yior, Hatolcl, ,;_p 117-2'1-2'. Tr "' Van 0.. 1"1n. WIHI-J, CJTJ, AP' US. Tr 4135 Lot 4S. MOI.... of., ProllCt ~Nd Oii AP U)(Ql..01, Otr'1 bond ~ HYabla to 111a' ordlr of Thi• .i111rnanl flCltd ._wllh '.:' c':"": lf73 .... I). l"9oe I~ ltt..O Ste 1 L."' Lob 1,&lL tl..,_IS. ftWll, Ftll'Ylaw F•nn1 Lot .. N S.S.J Fl S Ctlcltr'ol'I. Tony, AP 1S7-U2-1L Tr 550 1367.ll. tho C111t1rt Com-..nlly Cotltoga Dlll'rlcl C1Hk of Orang• °""'T on lllllll ' P'ublfthac:I °"'"""' COii! D•llT •l'o-", <Q ., .. IL •7>4.t1. Ktlf!N, Walltr. A~ 117·2..tl·Xt:. Tr '5t t.M IJI WY! -E• w 10 Fl-. 114.19. L.ot• .,,, Blk ,, Ult.II. ll'YIM Co of w V• '/Oii' l.abri~. Bo..-11 of Trv. .... .In •11 MTIOl.lnl not lel1 im. ..... "' Da .... JaM '"AP 5N11-1t, laltlOI L..i 6 All -tnc "°' Abtll Alll'r Adi-·EX Haftll-. ltOlblrl I!. (M$J, A• nun-Nollft. .t.nnl• Mff, AP' lSf-!tl-42. s.c 31 l•rO.r• c .• AP "°'*l"" Tr "11 L.ot 146 thin five Cllfctnf U"'I Oil"" l\IM bid IS JOHN c IALY•JI P·7J'1S f~·1 IS. 22. "· •nc:I StptMnllfr s. 1""'4 .... S.C I L.at 1t Ilk If, ...,..Jt. HWY'". U11.as. ts. Tr 2'116 Loi I. OMA T S It 10 W 2 Ac SV, Sl!lli SEV. ·~ W Unit 1'6 of Prolacl lOC.IMI Ir. Al a IVl"lfltM !Mt 1M blddtr wltl tnt...-Into A~ t LIW UAl ·n ''•1¥. l\IM!, Af' IN1>16. 11"°9 !Mand ltllJI-fllll'C'f' It CUWI, AP 117-2.U. Chllrdl. l111lawood Clwtt"•n of Jt Fl., «2,.Si, '"'4ll.OI, $405.50. tt. Pfcpotoad CoritrKI If lfM wma ts a rt Stlt 2'J PUBUC NOTICE ltiM* SK I l.af 2:1 Ilk ID, '"6.<111. IS.. """"' Halflll• Lot 115 NWIY 1311 fl V•tllM, W•lfl. AP 11M2'1.o6. Tr' L.• » Woodt. Oonlkl E .. AP 1•7-111...,, Tr lttS J. w. l(lllQ Dw Co Inc !Cit), AP -rdlll 11111 him. '"IM went or l•ll11rt to ~~~ c"!',,..: •n!M. C."1111 •. !IT), AP' tMn40:, SWl¥\'1 -i• SE.IV JO,, & MWIY UCI l"t &. WV. E\11, fJ.2411.'4. l.ol 7. 173SA. tn-lMCI, Tr 7t01 LOI Ill Unit 4 ot Pl'olaci tl'llW lnlo well CotrtrK!, tri. procNd1 of Pl.lbll~ O...~ COHt O•llV Piiot 1----::.,--ccc,.,-.,.,..,,-----lal!Nll llllftll R...W kl Lot .ID Ilk 10, SI· ·sm.il. St"1rna11. Ropr H,. AP 167·11'4, Tr L.ocalMI on AP Ut-171.(l! IQOltb..-,wtttl Ml IN CS.Ck wlU bl fortt!Md, Ill' In Iha c11a 22. 2f nCI Septembar s. iL 'IClfTIOUS atntNl:SS '17.M. ' ~II ()forge J (Nit), AP l17•2•J.24, Llllllalv, Cllflorc:I W. lJT), AP' 11""'2.0J, DOD L.ot 95. Sf4 .... Und l/lf !flt In Lots 1 lo 2:J loc. $14"'. of I boflc:I, ""' lvll 1um llMr'toOf wlli bl ~~us! . ' 1 JU&..IJ M.t.MI STATRM•NT' ,..,.. .. Marl ... c .. AP ~. lallloa """"' '"'-'111t11 Lot ns P'Ot lllf L•, Tr •SJ L.ot 10) A.II ·I!:• E'ly 2 Ac-.inc: P'OI" Flemi. Revmonc:I. AP 1'9-461.(14. Tr 5't . Jorflltld .. MW tdlOOt dllfrlcl. 'rha followlno .,.,_ It dol111 M l-• ~....,.,.lac I I.Of It Ille ll. s.atA. l!)LU. Min St A.41-. 55'2M. I.of 3, UU.A. COOE A•IA lMll No bidder m1y w1thcll"•w 1111 bid tor 1 11: W\lhft"lolllun, O.v111 ti .i Tr !NOi. A,. Ct&ll'lpton. C1'11M 8 , AP 111°2s+oi. Tr AP l....st4 Tr Uf Lot ' sv.. 11".u . Hrlod of tortv-fl.,. (tS) dav• llfltt !he PUBLIC NOTICE NOJl:MS MOTOllCVClE HAVEN, ,,,, .._.lS, ltl!Nll IMand lac J L.ol 17 II~ 1101 Loi tz. sn:l--50. . CODI AltlA lS-t41 fUl'lfllll, Donatcf I.~ M' lff.oJl.(15, Tr 5't lrvlM l"°'11trl1I Complex INR I, A, data' NI IOI' the flP'"lng lhtor.oi'. So. Sl•nllanl, s.tota Anlo, Ctfll. b.rtlMfM. Eclcll,.._ Alvlrt• C.. Al' 117.s'l-11. lot ., N\"I, SU1.'2.. ~l.(111, ll'Yint S1.11> L.ot 121 91k .. 10I' TM Banf ot TtVltt.. ,._..... the PICTITIOUS IUSINl:SS Norman F. FIM«, )tll .,..., Sf,. «.~ ... .....,.., AP JO.-lD-H. .... Nft'JIOrl HllfMi L.af 116 SWIY\11 of:• SEIT Naadltr, Jay H., A1" lu.o»20, ~ Alcala, R.!Jban L. It 11, AP l•M'Tl.:U, ot Loi IP M U-...0 Par 2J, S1.o:l1.SO. fl'l'lil-O-of r.fK!l119 •AV and all bld1 OI' NAME STATEMf.NT N.wporl 8Mdl, Ca. f2'60 I~ 5K t Lot 11 lllr. It, Ulll.11, 5JO Ft a. HWly lS Fl&. SI•, 11111.11. MIU Tr l.Ol 1001 S 100 Fl t: DI l"I ;£• S Tr J6f I.el n , 1216.2._ Al' '35-0.ll.ft. lrvlM SllO l.lllf' 121 I lk 4 to w•lw •nv lrragul1r1t!H ot lrt-llll followlne Pl'f'IOl'I 11 dolr111 buslnau Tlll t bullnatl 11 cOnducfM ey -,., In· ..... c.cn L. AP' .. ,,,., .. l•fllol WlllOl'I, Gtlll'g<f w.. AP' 117·29\-G1', • Ft-,'"'·"· • Htr1llnc:lat. ll1ymond M~ AP 1ff•1.f3. POI' ot Lot (I" M ~ Piii' P1r 11, tonnalltlat In any bid or In fM blddl!ID< at: dlvldual. I ltltl'ld 1tc J LOI tt llti It, Uf.S.)7. NIWJ*'f Ha6Clllf• 1.ot 13' NEIY 10.15 Pt AP 11 ..... fl, Nt'#Potl Mfta Tr L.ol 1001 Tr Sit L.OI t'l. Sl,.,ti, •1G,37•.t 7. . SloNd: MAIR L.AI•. llHO 8otu Chk•, H-. Nonnan F, ll't..c. / :M< O...ld • ......,, AP Jl>.141•22, l•lbol SWlr TIQ,IJ'ffl SEl'f' 12' Ft, •tt•.ts. s so l"t Eb) Fl, $2!6.JO. H..-nMldlz. 9atlll• c . !WDl. AP NOltMAt{ E. WATSON tll'IQ!on BMc:tl, o . '260' Thi• •l•twntrlt .... "*' wlftl""' c~ tlUind k I Lot 2S Ilk II,""·"-Na!h. WIUl•rn H., Af' 11t"1t-"1· flodltck. CllftlW c. (MM). AP' 116-4131-lff..Oll·ts.. Tl' stt L.ol 1Jt •l'ld Lot lilO. CODI AltlA SM\6 S.Cr.t.ry, 8(8n:I of Tru''"" J•dt Armond Rello, -rum L.otk1et. IY Cllrli; of Oranot C'Ollftty' Ol'I Alrlult ll. A•ILM, J ..... o • ., al, AP JO.-lJl-21, M.woort ~f<Jhtt Lot ., SWIY :1).1$ Fl :a, H--1 Mtw Tr Lot tol NIY IJO Ft wcn.10. Open: ,..,..,,.,.. 17, 1m. 11;00 •. m. Hv"ll""on Baacll, C•lll. 92646 1m ' talbOa ,...,,, tac 4 Lot Joi Ilk 14, H'NI, 200 l"I, 15'$.to. ·I• Wly IJO Ft &. Ill' JM Fl &. St-, St.It ti Ctllftmla IXT), AP' lff•l-2', Ca11tl9 A!Ptlldff O. CJT), AP ...,..,$> Bid Ho . .411 Thi• b\fllrte11 Is conOuclad bY 1n In-J 11-J,MJt 11.tn..tt. ' Dl•an. Vlrglftla L.. !NOi, AP' 117.m-ot, UJ1'1, Tr Sit Lot 1,1, 1221.lt. o., Tr ~II Lot .. anM. ,.ubl1sh«J Ot'lll(llt CO..t Diiiy Piiot C1lvkl11at. P'llbll•hfld °'9nOt C-t D.ny ·~lot, ...... Hlltfl l... et 11 Tr. AP' J0.1'241. Tt 200t Loi t, san.u. wuua""' CIVW E. Jr, AP ll..o3l'3J, L.uN. Ctrlol. AP 1•'411.41, Tr stt Loi ..... 1,,. Co of w Va l./lt' It~. Aurusl,, Ind $tpttmbaor '· lt7J 77m-n JKk Annond llallto Aug111t IS. u. ,,, and -......r s. •tir.. hlal'ld SIC: 4 l., It Ilk I), A11ton, flosa D .. Af' 11"°12.ctS. H-oart N.wport MtM Tr Lot tol W 1)2 Fl E 2'4 ltf, U22.22. O•vlc:I L AP' ™ Tr '211 1.11111' .U. PUBUC NOTIC. E Thi• 11-laltmlrd wn fllad wttPt ttla lt7l 2517-73 11,011.11. HtloM• Ult 1'1 SWll' 100 Fl NE1y too Fl Fl -E• SI·, $tlO.n . °'*'" Dtnford J .. AP l•t.OH.OI, Tr ti M.26.. CounJy ,, .... of Of'ell!lto COUnty on1---------------• ,.,...., Htlff L .. AP s1'24f, efllboto NWl'f' ao ..-1 -E• SWIY • '' Nwty 140 Pt """'"· IC•ITh s .. Af' 116-152-lt, N.,..,or1 Ptt I.QI u • ..._16. Erna .... ~ c. IJl), ... ,. 40QM02, A11911st :zo, 1f1) PUBUC NOTICE llil•nd sac 4 Lot" II-1J, 11.otl-'4. .. SI·, 11.&20.2'. Mnl Tt L~ IOI» H '1.2S Fl s r.tsi Fl £ Kanno. Jim .. IL Tr IMO), AP Tr 6217 Lot '° u.nsv STAT'IMl!llfT' Oii AIAJllDOllMafllT ,.,,,11 .....,,II, Stanl'tflCll'I, AP JO.)ft,.ft, WorMy. JK~ (MS!. AP 11U1241. ltl fl In Lot, Slit.SO. , ... 111.ot.02. f'OI" N'MAI s.c 2' T 5 R 10, lrvlM Co (N~) AP ....,...u. lr:vlna OI' USI 01' PtCTmOUs l'vbll~ Or .. Coast Otlly P11ot.I----:::=:::::::-:"':'.:::::'::=---- ···-llllfld S4oc: 4 Lot l Ilk lJ, "''A NIWlllll'1 HtfOlll'I lot UI SWIY "° ,, ... .....,, E:mtll Jr, ... ,. 11 ... IU.U, 115.tSl.'2. S11b·Lot Blk,. ~.,Ilk. WS.40. ' •USIN•n fllAMI "'""· 22. 2' Ind s.,t. s. 12, 1tn u11.n l'ICTfTIOUS l"'lf•llS ,......,_, T"*-A. ff ti fMV), Al NWJY\.\. •IO:l.94.. N....-orl MMa Tr L.ol 1D06 5 41.25 llt E ,lor9'C., ICar!Nlll C. (JTI, AP 16f•llJ.11, O ICHft JoM J (Jl) AP 463--11»47 Tr TIM foUuw1111t ,..._ NY9 •bmn4onad NAMI STATeMaNT •1a1.11, 1atb0a llland s.c J Lot :a. Ilk Af' 11JG.Ot, N.....,_t ...io1111 lot 20 IS5 Fl 111 L.Of, s111.ao. Tr~ L.rrt s. Sl,05234. 6&Sl LOI ..2, 1441 ,; ' ' Itta 1151 of Iha tlctltlolll bllllriau ,..,... PUBUC NOTICE Thi loltowll'ltl .,.,_ It dott11 business .. tm-t7. Nl!I, JO Fl Swty 100 Fl NWl'tl\. 11'0.32. Ott"*'· ••r1 N., AP' lla.i:J0.41, ,. • ...,._, K-111 e .. AP flMl.QCIS, Tr M•rloM T!IOl.i11' G !JT) AP "3-lU. MIClt°"""IEDtCAJIO S2I -'"' St Hiii'!-••: P'MM·, Ha,..., D., Al' JD-JG.m. I•"*' WIKIO. A. V, tJT ), AP' llMK1•22, N ...... M14a Tr I.It 110I W * 11'1 E Sl'6 L.af S Uni! 5 of Proltcl Loc1ltd ct11 OI Tr 61,s;j L.ot lS. wi" ' , Jlnoton INCh Ca f..i6"M " OIJIECT LOAOINO SYSTEM$ CO., tlll!W la(, L.a! n 1111: n, -.W. /WWport Htlghl1 lof 1'2 JW'ly ... lJ Ft 40 ,,, SJ.-trt. AP' l5'-061·2 toDtlW with an Und 1/176 Irvine Co INR I, AP ...,.\:U.15. lr'llM TtM flctltto.'.. 111.i.inat• MITlto rtllrnd to l'ICTITIOUl IUSNflSS Jan Kl"Olford TtrT.ct, IMM, Calif, , .WMotn. L.91111111n £., AP' »IU.Jll, Illy f'l,50 Fl. 161t ,52. Pklflc EQllll ... fP'T), AP' 1W.t91·10, Tr Int In L.otl 177 lo 1•7 Inc, 11S7.U. Sub L.OI IN-tt ,._. ot l it. Sl1.lf, al>ow w•1 fllell In Orat191 C-ly on 111.t.M• nATl:MIJfT '2'64 ...... hf•lld SK' L. .. fl Ilk 11. ,,...,,_ •• """' WIHlam H. !Jf), AP 111.ou..J6. 41S1 L.O'I u. """· °"""'"'· JM!tt M.. IJT), AP fllM1'°'9. lrv!N Co ICJIJ, AP' ~laM1. Tr ,,., A11111.11t ''· 1911. Tiii foH(lllllfno ptr'Mfll ,,.. dolrig ow.n l lneoln ll'lftd. Ma KlllftfOrd Clll_. Ellfw)lri ... lroc A,. JO-ltl-11 Tr-Kl 1611l.OIJt,1241.1'. 1(1ll1r, RlcMrd &.. el M IMV), Al" Tr Sl5' Loi 4t Unit .. f/11 ProlKI L-llld Lt S. ll.t57f4-1'•111 to-.. Slopnlk J20 • 1111 St bvtln.s at: 'ttrTac:w, lrvll\ll, Cal. t2aU ............ he: I L.:it 13 Ilk :n: ~. l\ldMrd, AP llMrl·lJ. na.2'1·15, Tr 41S1 lot •• llu.11. on AP j56.(IU·J lllOtlhtr wlTh In Und 0 • H11nll111ton klctl, c •. n... " I c l"llOPEl\TIES. S4.tll1 •• Horth Thll bUllnnt /1 C41ndue!M bY' •l'I ,,,. $1..f[lJll, ... .....,.,. !Wlvtlh Lot In NWIY 6) ,, sely PKlflt: !'Ql.lllln ,,.TJ, AP """1·17, Tr 1/116 1nt In lob 1n to 117 Inc. SU7.0I. COOi A•U. »9 D...-td J, Tl'flor, 7MJ hrwldt Cl T-. soo so. ~Ill SI .. Ulllon Bink ell~. ......... G•l'Y l CJT I AP .'8-IJUI ,. Ft ·E• Nlitv IU Ft-, srn.•. dSJ Lot .. 51,005.JD. '""°'"' llM<M It .. AP ,...,.on. Tr 80l.llW Cdo. IDJOI .• lQutora, ~. Calif. ,.... 0-.n l . FWd .. 1INll 1·,, ..... s.c :. L.ot,; 1111: l .... ,,.,.; .HfWon. ~ E. el ... AP 11 .. 11241. Wtr'd. Wl!Utt\'I •• (UM), AP 116-7'1-tl, S3S6 Lot 71 Unit 71 ot P'rojK1 Localed on ,,...,,...I~~ CCI\), AP"'" Tllb ~·--· coMuctwd '" • E-.rt l!'llfll'll WMYar. 12' C101 or .. ' T~:· :11~~· Wll 111td Ullflh Iha cow.. I Ill UI '' •• 1, tl,lfl.2L NtwM11 Kriafll• l.ol 2SJ NE:ty 100 Ft N_,.,.i Mast Tr LOI 712 All ·E• E SDol AP 15'-0ll-2 loOoflltot' With •n Und 1111• DH·lf, Tr SMJ L.ot 1.._ tt50.JI. Gef!Wal Parfrlwlhlp, L.tlll.ll'lt BNCll, C1\ll, f'1U1 I~ ar "OI County 1111 AWi.iii lJ, JKel90ft, L. c. ISEI, A,. !0-17NIO, SWly *Ft MWly Its Fl'" Lot ·E• SWlv Fl., ll,atl.ff. 1111 In Loh 177 lo 117 Inc. SCD.04. ... P1ul G. Stopnlk f'alsy AM w ...... , tu Cliff 01' .. ..... llillfllt IK. LOI'. 1111 l um" s.s Fl .. SI•, Slk•. Twytl'ltfl, Edw•rd o .. Af' 11..-.1., O•"*"· W-.rd s. (JT), AP t:JN1...,.,, COOi ...... SHa 1'·21UI llOVl'I• lffdl. ca111 f26S1 P'ubl •·VaM """"" Cllrl-"M L.., AJ1-' •1~16 Eltfeft. Ori ,,, AP 111-171.Qt. Tt 451 NtwPOFI Mast Tr Lot ltt I!' JO Fl W )11 Tr 535' Ull Y1 Uni! Y1 ot P'rol•I ~ltd P'\lblllhtd Or•noa Coest DtilY P'!lot Tri. bullnus It uMuct.i by •n unlrt-A • l5Md DrMICl9 Cont Oall"f' f'ttot, ..... t't1....i ltc J L.ot 16 lllt 4, fJ 01.24'. lit J NWIY 2fM Ft alld IEl'f' 21.'7 l't Let Fl -IE:x H l li Ft·, f?'JD.11. on A, 1$M61·f klfftillr .-ITh M llnc:I Irv! IM\ltlT'lll C11ml)fax AP' '3M41·ll. ......... 2t and Sapttmbtr S. U. It, COfPOl't._,., -..odsttctll OC11er ni.n a I~ IS, .t2, 2t, Mid Stopt.mbar S, • · .., unM. 1(116 1n1 In I.ob 111 to 11' In<:, SJ22.7S. ,.. • 1m 29112 parfMnltlp. m1-n COO. AltU ,.... ~ o.m11, Cenlfantl,,_ ~ Af' 1 r•2'16-l1, COOi A•SA IMM L'Jl'fldl, Fritnk M.. (Jf), AP' '3Ml-11t, Tr Tr '3U L.ol 11 ltK11"1! LOI In Liii!, -EVWl'H E. WM,,., • Tr,,., Lot 11, U.:,911. JUa LOI llt U11lt l it of Pro!KI L.~IMI U.o6'.~ PVBI.JC N011CE TI111 •l•twnenl ,.. .. ftliad with ff11 cou"' PUBUC N011CE ....,'1,':i:~~r CM AP 111-1714', Tr »J2 COOi AllA IHIJ u:"~ii ~~;'!i v,r ~:s~IMM4. Tr r,17~~"'1~!;! ,m!"l';', ~~ .="'~"° 04\~rl"'T;~m~ fr.:':t 't;!·S:.:t4.: ~~lark: ol Dr•rlOI ~., ....,..,,' .. ''· l'ICTITICUS IUltttftS -1 L_;,,. C Af' llHll.fJ Tr l"4 Grtl .... M..-'l!ro I .. 'AP' 11e.ocJ·l4, T' 114 Frtrot. IC11 9. tNOl, AP' tJD.al-152, Tr CODI A•l.t. ....... PICTITIOUS •llllNISS fllAMll'STATIM•WT \.II 1 s.fto n •• ' SYlllllc•lad E~-C..,, CHOI, AP Lot If SllV\'I. SUI..., Sl5' Loi 152 Unit IS2 ot ProlKI a..-lld Tiit fllAMI nAT9M81fT f'11blllllad Ort~ Coe.t 0.lly P'llO'I, TIM lollowlnt ,.,_ It: dollll flvtlnetl ' • ' 14141l•U. I'"" Tr Lof l Ilk O P'or ot Llfl'-. A. J •rMt J; fJT), Af' 11"°'2· CWI AP 1SHt1·2 ~ wtTh an Unc:I COftlPIU AP -OIMID folkrwt1111 NfllOfU, .,. doing A\IOl.lll 22, n, and Stptllmbar S. 12. Ii; ceo• AltlA 7.fN lo! •• OlilC In DD .a.oeJ• 01\--£• P'ar IS, Tr 11• L.ot ,, NWl'(\11, ln.t.21-1(176 lnl In Lolll 1n to 117 lrte, D0.92. 02.'rr"'"'1!'t:~''ttt.J1S. • ~~ .. k.,,,111.IN!' WOOOCltAFT. lS3l 1m 2622-72 IO\JTHlltN COMP:Ol\T. 211$ Uf..,... In DO ~IX Oft. Ind f'Ot or l.af' Ilk Crontchtr. w .. Af' 111·12'-U, N""'°" Am•v•. ltDMllnda M .. AP m.tl-15'. Tr 1rvl'n!"1noui1r1.t co.ftp1e• IC•) Af' .QO. Nonr I "· HIWport .... c.. flNO lrvtM c1 &/tr WUIOll Htlllt (flllt), AP O 11 O..C In DO ~f:IO Oft-·l!x p., 111 lilltllr. L.ot m SWly 140.1S Ft NWly »5' Lot 1.H Unit 1st of Pro\ act L.oc.IJ: l•l.ot, Tr aJOl L.OI 1, *""·"· ' 92WJ °"a Avt., Nawpott INCh, car. PUBLIC NQ'nCE Gokla N. ori.,., 'IOI VI• ArotlllH,. 1..a1..v. Tr 2202 L.OI... ....... 00 -M»/2311 Ollt., '"'·1•. 12G.JO .. , -£• NWl'f' l'D Ft .. St-, USO.to. Ol'I Af' 1~1·1 logtther ... Th •n lrv1M lnd111trl•I cornoi.. (Nil,, AP Rltlllrd Oannb McComb, 455 '"" H1wport l••Ch. Ct. 92660 ll'YIN CO &Jor Dvnlu, f'aut It., AP Morain, Jo. T,. A,. 1"'°'1.._ B..-ry Tr Whl., C ........ C. CJT). AP 111-IS).31 1111' Int In t.oll ln to 117 lr.c, Sl5t.U. .(JD.202·11 lrvlnt SJ.lb LOI 110 11t. t P'Ot ot P'la~. Cost• Mn., Calft. 92427 l'ICTITIOUS IUSINt:SS Tllli bulllltlt la Canducltoef by 9ft lrto ....... 1 TtlCI 41'2 Lo! Jt IUf n L.o! S Ilk I E lOS.t ll'I S m.s Ft ·Ex St· Tr XS. Lot 4. "'' ti. F•lrdllld, Cltrtr.ct O. IJT), AP flO.ll-LOI CP ,/., 17-2' Pit 1) SJ.MO 01 Tommie W. W'h10tr, 1521 S1nta .Ana NAM a STAT9MIJllT dlvld1i•I. l"'IM C, &far Satly, H11!, A,,.~. n,4i 7.:u. . s.ckllta, l\tlph i. at II IM\fJ, AP' lll· l1•, Tr "56 Loi 114 Ullll 114 ot P'roltcl ' . , SI .. Cost• ,..,_,., Callt. 12417 TM following p1nOn1 ara dol Golda N. Df'ftn Tr.ct ""' l.M "' tJSt 71 Ntkal.1nl, o.v'kll K,, Af' 141·101·ll. .. ,.. 1'1.(11 Nawpeirt Ha!Ohlt L.ol 794 SElv 71 01 LOC•llCI on AP 1S6411·1 logelhar with ·~ Thi• buslnas1 II conducltd D'( • llftl.,., bll1lnnt at: no Thi• •t•l.intnl ...... t11ed wllll ltlt '°"'"" lrvlnt Cl &/or Hiadll"f' .. ,..Ill l . Jr. AP l'Y Tr Lot 1 Ilk I w ll'D l'I ·Es N l30 Fl-l"t NW!r 161.'7 ll't swrv 1'2 Fl, mJ.10. Und 1111• Int In LOI• 177 lo 111 Inc. ftROPllTY IN partnar1llif'. WOMAN'S v .1,e .w •• VARIED IN-~,f"'k ot Or•rooto County on Auoiwt ll, till)-07)4', Tr.ct '"I L.Ol 100. UOJ.35, ::..,."! ll'D ,, -Ex St-l.ol IO llll a, C a Ill J.t4 13A:.!;. Vallar Numblr Two (PTJ, AP fl lcllard 0 . McComl> TEltEST IEOUCATIONAL. WORKSHOP', I" V 'lr<ilnt Cl tof W V1 "'°' krtlt, N, Edin. lAonard fi:,. Al' l'l.Jll·lL Tr 4"• 00 A A I S fJ1·2Ul). Tr 5651 Lot 12 Unit 13 ot Pt!> NEWPORT·MISA UNIFllD Thl1 •l••-nt w11 Ill.cl with l~ Co11n-'21 No. Newport 111\ld., N..,..port Batch. P'1rbll.n.d Or•no• Coeit D•I ... Pllof, 411 Na\"lfto AP' t'll·IJ.o!M. Tr 4227 lot 6 U11l1' LOI , 17._.. ltct L.ociltd ti'! A,. 1•"411·7, u..fO. SCHOOL DISTRICT ly Clark or Or111119 CWr!ty ori A1111u.1 '17, carlt. '1660 Auout1 IS. " ... ,roltoct L.oc1tad Ol'I AP 4't-12'1-1, ~·'' N°""'9a1 .. i,,, ''1-j12.ot, Tr ..... L.ot 1(. ... ~ .. ~·.,•,cit:.:.~~·· AP 11'.(16.).(1'}. Tr Al" '31·2M6S. Tr S651 Loi 2t, taU.H. Im J•cctUtllna J , Cook. 202.S L.arnnol Ot., 1'71 22• ]f, and _,.,..~ s. U7t ."1 ..... ..... • ,...,_ Wlltlarn&, Wlllllm l . IJT), AP 931"2-o:JS """'" Cott• Ml!Y. C•1ll. m2' 11 CODI A•IA 1-tl',4 A.irni111strit01" ot V•tt Afl•ln USA ,:"'.,· 1•1•,°'.,"'•""..,,11!'! Corp, A, l)t~. Tr "°' Lot u •nc:I Por Lot 1 ol Pr1> coor AllA ss.ttt Publl1hfd Drlno• Co.1st oau, Piiot, C•roly/'I s~ B1rn•s, 2025 M1nd1rln, (NOi AP 111 Sl2 1S. Tr """ Lot ;m -fKI loctlwd on AP 156<2<11..(ll SJIJ 25 AVOusl 2t •nd S'P!etnbar 5, 11, 19, Cosla Masi , C•llf. '26M PUBLIC N011CE '""'"' C• ot w V• .. ,. H\lflltr, ltlctwtNI S)M .._ ' ' • Ja~ Goll f'totnO!lon lUSAI Inc (CJIJ, Val'ldlt '°"""'"· HlrN i._ 1Ji1,. A' Hiit, Mtry E .. A,. 1»210..oa. 11'\>lM Suti ,,,, "'1-n Thi• buslMS.S Is condl.IC:ltd bY • vanat •li;;;;;:o::::=-==-==oc-,,.---- 1 .. AP' .Sl.(llMI, Tr "2l L.ot 7'. IG$.5'. s'""-. o.ty1 D .. A• 1•1-m.tl, Tr isoo AP 1,,.111«1. Allttl Tr Lot '-l1 Ac In SK n 1-u-on. Tr "°' Lot fl Pf'ltjact Locll.0 Lot \Sl Blk 51 Pot of LOI, t2,ts1.f4. pefllltl'lh!p. STATl:MlfllT 011 WITND•AWAL. ,.JIOM "-!kflW, It. o. Jr INJll, AP 4#-llS.I•, L.ot 11 ..,,..._ ' T ' It 10, 11,1ot.a . _.AP is..201.01 u it si. PUBLIC NOTICE J•((!Ulll,,. C.ook P'A•TN•JlsMtP OP'IRATI~ UNO•• Tt Mil lot "· llt.1..41. ' AP IJf.111·10, AJlln Tr L.ol 1.2' AC In .s.c 01'99" Yan..,.' Korntvwn.n lltoc.rHllOll COOi AllA SMIS Tiii• 1111-' -· fllld with Iha Coun-PICTITIOUS •lllUtlSI llAMI 1,..,,...nt Co or W Va &/or lrwtn, Wl"l1rn COOi AltlA 1Mll 4 T 6 It 10. IDi.74.. AHn (NOl, AP t:l141-0N, lr f120 Loi O IV Clttk af Clr'•noto County on Alllllltl 20 Tri. l'Oll(lllllfrl!f Nt"llOn t1111 wttl'lllfr-n 115 •• INJI ), A, 4S.1U.lt, Tr .Cl Lot to. AP 12'-'11·11. AJllft Tr Loi Irr .. •.'7 Ac Comn'IOl'I Al'OI L.ot "' Pl"OIKI Loclhid on l•vflh, JKlt, Al' 1»2!041. Tr "" Loi "~~~S~AT11!'!:~':.~" lt7J,. • l*ltrll ""'*' floam ,,.. PIOMnl'llP "'41 tO IC 1 f'at ..... s {JTI AP 11..a.1 " Tr In Ste s T 6 It "· Slff.Q. A,. '" '2'1.(12 MlOM. 111 Pot ot L.of ·lllC Por of Mtla Dr .. TIM fo!lowt f27•t1 ~·ttne llnclar """ fldtllOln t11Hlna11 wiinrtz. EUMll •• lWO>. Af' &-.0,, ,, ~' •. ...,,,,,: • . • AP 1•1i1.ot. Tr nu lei v, .,,... G~ V•Jl~y Nurnbar Two (Pf), AP l lrc:ll St Adi-and Por lob llt to 121 Inc: ••• "" ptrton I• dctl1111 bll•fl'lftl Pllbll1Md Drlnoto Cont D•lty Piiot, nama ot c .. ll OP'TICAL. co., II ,,5 "M" ~r 6'M Let IOll. MU.SI. Farr1.. Alma! at al. AP' 11 .. 111.01, R,n-oh, E..,.,.. w. lJll, AP' 1•122.21, m......ov. Tr"" lot Cttllmol'I Al'OI L.ot ·Inc "°' of Miii Or .. 11rdl SI Adi·· . VEE Gee COMPANY ,. 0 '" "' Aue. 22. 29' ltnd Slpt. S, 12. lflJ 2m-n w. 17111 SI .. Costa Mast, Ca. ""'- IMM C• GI w v. a.10t T~io-N· Ntwoort Ma!Ja Tr Loi 10! s 17' ,, W\11 Tr "" Lot 177, tl.l.U.J'l, A of P'ro]KI Loc1ttd on AP lff-301.0\, $520.tl. .,. lr'otd'w•r Cotta ~ 'c~ nm • ·usu rcJ~ tlctln-~. ~ •tt letnt{Sf Diwr. Af' 69--...lS, Tr UU Lot •··EX E' Fl· f l,20.U. Jll)an Goll f't«not1ori IUSA ) Inc {CR), .......S.tt. CODI AllA " .. II 0..,.,. Wllli•m Colfl'f iro .:....oway p C N<n'ICE 1,73 In ::r::=polw~ tllld en J""" a, t1A2'fM, ,. .. _.. .. IJTI AP 4Jl-2ll.ol ""»'• l!lrl (JTJ, AP 11 .. 114-14. Tr llo:t ~~~~\~~·=Tr L.ot 4.16 Ac. In SK COOi AJll!A i1'404 Cwta Mell, ca. '2'27 ' ' Full Na~ and Addri!."":f ~ ,..,'°" "'-"""" ........... • ' Liit 4 ll.cMl.10-' Thi• bllllnau. 11 ~ Dr M In-STATIMllfT 011' WITHO•AWAL Wllhdr•-· Tr~ Lal '" IJ:IO..O. Olton. Otcar ... (JT) AP 11 ... 1-.n 01 H•lllrJni, Douel•s A .. Al' 1,,.,,,.1., Tt Marlldlth, Cl)'lk L_, ~ 11"'~"°"· Tr dlv!ctult. ll'•OM P'UTftllHHIP' Ol'IRATlfllO ' Nhl'PGl't Mftt lr LOI ' JDS POI" ot l...o1' »t.) L.af n •11111 W I Ft I.el t6. '4'9.lt. P'ldlk Coa it Proptrtl11 fC• ), A, lU. 6' Lot 5 SE.Ir 1'5 Ft lll'ld SEly 15 Ft Lot 6. 0..,,.,. W COfftof UNOSlt ll'M:TITlout IUSINIS$ fllAME H=r .!; 1...-,,., 'llS C1u!a St,. C009 ........ ,... ""'·'"' ' SlrnptOtl. Jol\n M.. .\I! IJt.ll)-11). Tr zm lU.07 SK ll T s JI 10 """ Nii.Iii, Sl,17,,46, Tiii' ···~ W.1 Hiid wlTh ""c°""" TM follo'lllltll ,,..,._ ,... wtlhdrl'll'!I •• Chlslar ct ~ ~ Nntlln, Lei• "" A,. ll•lnot, 'fr ,,.. Ult ll. """" *'·"'·°" Klug, Jofln w. (UM), ""' ll,.27).IJ. Tr ty Cltttt ti Or.,,.. County on A Ull 27, • "'*'-' Nrtnat trOITI 1111 """"""'" . ,., • -..C• L.ttl, ~ 11.6-1,.IS. Tr 4G Loi t. Loi '· $#I.ft. Mii-. Jamw J .. Af' 13'-ln.o.. Tr lni.mtlfonll SVlllflll Corp IC.JI), AP 6' L.ot IS SElrl'll -t:x SEIW. .. SWly IZN lt71 Ill OPtrallno ll!ldtr Iha flctltlws bllslnffl ,.llblllhtd Or P-tit"U .... • .. miay. H1l. A~ ... 21.001. Tr ms*' Lot 125. 11,111.'2. 1Jt.l6.MQ, SK ttT s It 10 POI" NEV.,,. M , .... sut.U. l"•f7767 tll""' of 0000 WOOD L.TO. 1625 Ohm1 A 22, 2t and•ne• Coa1! D•llv f'llot, L.ot 1 Ur»t l ot l>rolact Loclllc:I on AP T•"'· Jttnaltl M., AP' 1 .. 111.ot, Tr )t.tl P•r 1J), sa.m.20. f'Ublld'IM Dnnoa C'oell O•tly Piiot, w.y. COii• Matt. C1tlf, mn uo. , Sip!. J, 12• lfn tst+n (001 All.A 74'1 11"1""' too•lfltr with an Und llt Int In D6J Lot 2', '400.11. Pac:ltk: Coast PtOllfl'tlH fC lll, AP COOi Alt:.t. IHlt AUllVll 2' •nll Slplarnbtor 5. 12 It Tiit ttttlti-MIMK n•""' st11trncnl PUBUC NOTI~ " ' Lot 10, 14st.IJ,. Pal""''• KftlMTh N. It If, AP' l,,._lfl.OS, 1U.16J..os, SIC ll T J fl II Por NE\O , "'9 2'17.r.j IOI" the partntnri1p wa1 ftlld on Marci! 7, '"'.-:.. ~. CMl'lft J, Tr .... IMV J, Af' AP t»lt"'10t. Tr 5215 Lot 2 Vfllt, ol f'fl> Tr '912 L.ot u. UU.f'J. (P M )6.?f Par 11), $'21.11. Flndl1V, M. Allct. AP 11•203·17, Tr 11Sf ltn In tM Countv ol Dr•'lll•· 1---"='"""'.,.,-.,.,------11f.~ Tr 10t Lot t6. im.n. Jtoet L.oc1t.o on AP 11 ... 111 .. ioo-111ar Jon11. t.nll• It., AP l,M:l\·2', lr U2' AP t5'<16S4, iec :n T J It 10 Por NE\4 Lot it, s.&a.7.. PUBIJC NOTICE 11'1111 "'•""' Ind Adlf,... of 111e Plll"1ct11 111ct1T1ous 1us1H1ss H....,. Cati w .• AP 1lt·Ut~I. Tr '°' Wlllt •n Ulld l/f lnl In LOI 10. 165'..Q. LOI 1 ... un.it. (P M a•21 Pl!' IJ), .. ".:ts. W1lhdr•w11111: NAMI STATIMINT 1Af JS All •IM SWly~. C.SJll. ,.,. f».ll«O, Tr .$17$ Loil Unit S llf P'ro-C11nlll', •*'1 l , IJT), AP' l)t.ttl~I, COOi AltlA lHll ,.ICTITIOUS autlflllSS MAl\K l"AUL MIL91!AG, 21551 Thi following ptrt0n 11 doing bv•lnt111 /IC! L~ ori AP' 11•171 ... ~ Tr !IJJ l ot 17, '335.33, CObl Al\IA ti ... , fllAMI: STATrMIWT l rooklwrsl SI., HO. 212. t4\ll'ltln;lon It~ P.OPl.TY IN with •n Ulld l /f 11'11 In L._. 10. S6Jt..G. Sn10fr, L.. Ktoltll, AP I~ Tr 1111 lh1lf1r. JKOO w .. Af' l•l·S21-.jl, ltrry TPll fotlowl"O P8f-• ar• doing •IMCh. C•lll. G.9. EL.l!!CTaONICS. 2117 VaJaKC ITY ..... .,,..., Tr svs L.ot. Unit 4 GI Pro.. L.ot 142, w:n.so. L• Lindi Hom•• CJVl. AP lU.otl-#, Tr Tr L.ot 1 Ilk c ,,, .. L.ot In L.ot, $3t2.Jt. bu•ln.,,:~ ! M1r~ ,.aur MlltJtrv L.•M. Costa M•••· c.111. '26U ,•,....~1coSTA. MISA C 1ac:1 L.ICltM .., ... ,. 11a.11t-4 tootl* o.pt o1 vatt Alf1lr1 or ttaia ot cat, AP 6046 Lot• 11150'2 ME MAIO KN E SKI COM· P.nnt e1r1 Thom•• 1arn111r111. 2111 lfliaJC• • A I with In Unc:I lit In! In 1.1110. N6J,U, Ut-tUoOI, Tr 21122 Loi lM. 1100.u. Mlllrr. Oorolllv M .. Af' 1"'111'411, SK coo• Altl.t. IMtl PAHY. INC., • ca1tforn!1 (WllOf"lllOll, f'llO!lm.f Or1rtt1• Coe1t DallY Pllof. Lt,,., Costt Mn.II, CaUt. '2'26 C'ol1 ...... 1.-(;:, 'f':.1:· !:. S21~ L~~x~ s:.~i: L.!·:~7~~~ A ..... ,. 13Mfa.ot, Tl!' 1481 "~k \:r.:o~ t~~ ANnu.,~~:c Dlrot&alt, Lura D .. A,. 11 .. ltt.07, Tr 1•~=:·c~::10M=:,.,;::'-eo.t1 :~VII lS, 22, 29, Ind ltpt~:.; •1!rJ!.,""''lneu I• CO<!CIUClad by .., *"" ··.-r~ "'""' IU I A) Inc wllll an Ullll llt Int In Loi I0, 16$t.d. Mf. Kim, WllKarn e .... ,. 1JfotM-lt, Tr '1 T J lit 10 '·" ~ MIL. In WV, NEli!i, 1~ Lit ,,, 1253.21. Mast. Calffotfll• Earl T~. ltrnhtt'\ff -~~AP°1';,.r.1•11 :-Tr L• '"" AP,..,.,.., Tr S27S t.ot' Unit 6 af P'ro-"22 1.o1 m, uu.'3 tll.tlJ.... MUllkln. Nalalte J. IHOJ. Al' Ht-1f3.25. T11l1 tMlnnt /1 condudld tl"f • PUBLIC NOTICE Tlll1 .rat•mant w•• ftlld wm. 1111 '°"""' 41 ltc J T' It tO S10Jf IKI L.oc•ltd on AP 11 .. 1n.a IOflllllr 01rOch, arvca IE . AP' l,,,,,.'NIL Tr Gii Cl•fllc O.WIOJ1""4nl c-!Cll), AP Tr 13U lot 21, SJll.51'. ClllfJIOt•c"~ •. H II p '"·-IV Clfrk ot °''"" (Ollftly on A119Vlt u. .T . let .. Ac. In w41h In Uncl 1/9 Int In lat 10. NM.al. LOI 57. ""·"· 1M·20:MS. Tr na Loi II, 1731.14.. L.ulfl, Fr•n-.... (NI\), AP' 1~ Tr .. "',, '"""""' l tn .,.,, ut>lll·U. 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Loi A AO'I °"' W., A\1911ll 19, Ind kPlllfttltt S. 12, lt, AVQutl IS, 11. Jt, and $19lltlltltf ~ .,. "" u1•11.u. m tlS. L.OlllL Natto11 0. IJTl. "" 11HJ0-2'. Tr Pr?tt-Jonb. Otvltl A ' (JTI. ,,,,. $l.OUJt ltn 11N-n "71 Uljon See the briglrter side of life along the Orange Coast in ~Oran~ Coast] RounClup One al tilt ftalllll!S that llllie SMnday F'l10E>AY DAILY PILOT 28 OAJLV PILOT . . . . . Welcome Aboard By ALMON LOCKABEY The Department of Navig•tlon and <>cc.an Development . the state's boaUng agency, apparenlly hasn't discovered it yet, but everything that floats is not a boat. Boating people in Newport Beach as v.·ell as other pleasure ports in Sootbern California are incensed at the recent "news release" from DNOD stating that there is an alarming upward trend in California boating fatalities this year over last year. The report said there have been 67 deaths in the first six _ months of this year compared to 50 at the same ti1ne last year. BlTT IT WASN'T until the middle of the "release" that Guy M. Rickseker, boating safety supervisor, came up \•:ith the fact that the "upsurge mainly involves canoes. kayaks, rubber rafts and other manually propelled ves· sets." One wonders why Rick.seeker didn 't include surfboards. pa.ddleboards, floating mattresses and inne.rtu bes. JI "·ould have made the upward trend even more alarming. if that 's what the safety supervisor is looking for. Ricksecker confused the issue fur1her by admitting that there has been a 12 percent drop in boating accidents and an even larger drop in injuries. Th.is confinns the Coost Guard report that, nationally, boating accidents are 011 the decrease. THIS IS NOT to say that a death from any cause - on the water or ashore -is not regrettable. But why hang this tragic circumstance on the boating fra ternity wh.ich is literally bending over backwards to improve safety on the 'vater. ,. . . -. . • NY GaL Takes Lead New port Skipper 2ud in W ornen's Event GREENWICH, Conn. (AP) -Ti1nothca Larr of !he seawantl:lka.COrinthian Yacht Club, New York, sailed a 21· foot Soling class sloop to finishes of two firsts and a third TuesdAy to take the lead in the North Am e r i ca n \\'on1en's Sa i 11 n g Chan1· pionship from the host Indian ltarbor Yacbt Club.here. She had 17 points Monday on a high·point sco ring system * * * Newcomb Crowd's Favorite \Vin or lose, Carolyn Newcomb and her Adams Cup crew of Rosie Jones and Barbara Barnard from Ne\•.'port Harbor Yacht Club are sentimental favorites to win the women's North American s a i 1 i n g cham· pionship at Greenwich, Conn. after finishes of n fourth and two thirds. lier consistent sail- ing in the six races of the eight·rac e series for t he Adams CUp gave her first place standing Tuesday with 39.5 points. Following six races. Carolyn Newcomb fron1 lhe Newport Harbor Yacht Club. held sec- ond place with 33.5 pc>ints. Katie Wilford. Tred Avon Yacht Club, Oxford, Md .. Monday's leader, had 31.5 points after finishing with two sixths and a. fourth Tuesday. Gillian West, Kit Si 1 an o Y.acht Ch.lb, Vancouver, B.C., stood in fourth place with 28 points and Rusty EverdelJ ot the Frostbite Society, Dux· bury, Mass .. 1!171 Adams CUp winner. bad 2S points for fifth place. Ann Boyd from · the Savan-- ~ah Yacht Club in Georgia. ti ed for sixth place with Sparky Arceneaux, Soolhern Yacht Club, New Orleans, La .• They bad 22 points each. Heidi Backus of t h e Ve rmilion Boat Club, Vermilion, Ohio, had a total seven · points Monday with finishes of eight, seventh and fifth places. Tuesday she sail· BOATING ed to finishes of filth , seventh and sixth for a six-race total or 16. The race for the Adams Cup was scheduled to end Wednes- day. '· •• ,. , . . . ·:· . • Campb ell Wins ' ;- '· 2nd in Ontario •. • • '· • KINGSTON, Ont. (AP) Four sklppers posted their sec. and victories °'-the week in the third race of the Canadian Olympi c Training R eg at ta Tuesday on Lake Ontario. In the Te1npest class, Argyle Campbell of Newport Beach tightened his hold on the lead with his second victory. In the Dinghy class, Clive Roberts of New Zealand tunr ed in his second consecutive victory and remained in first place overall. l ~1 th• Finn cl~. Otrlt · Blaw of England won his ...,.d ond race ol the week an jumped Into first place. • Unofficially. Daniel Thompson of Newport Beach was second In the standings. The Finn. Tornado and 170 results were unofficial because of a confused finish lo Tuesday's race. Robert James of Bena, Va ., led the Flying Dutchman class for the second time Tuesday, retaining first place in f.he. overall standings. ,,----NOW OPEN IN If R.ickseckcr investigated further he might find that most if. not all of these fatalities u·ere drownings rather than boat accidents. A person can dro\\TI in a bathtub. Ricksecker went on to say that not enough emphasis can be placed on the use of common sense on eanromia waterways. Most any of us will buy that. He also said the department is preparing a rree sa!ety pamphlet for canoe and kayak enthusiasts that would soon be available from the department. Unbiased observers at Old Greenwich reported to the Daily Pi1ot that "your girls are putting up a hell of a scrap to win the regatta 1.r :t>·, despite an unfortunate last place finish in Tuesday's third ·race." Miss Newcomb and her crew were ove r early at the start or Tuesday's second race and had to restart dead last. Despite this handicap they finished in third place. ln the second race the NHYC crew won handily to put them brief. ly in first place for the series. COSTAMESAJ & SANTAANi1r -. WE THINK TIDS is long overOue. If you've seen kids paddle those things out in front of an oncoming motorboat -f.orcing the skipper to back down under full power-or pa.d_dling qut to grab on the topsides or stem of a boat cruising down the harbor. A whir ling prop could cut them in half. As cranky as these craft are, it is more tha n likely that most ol the fatalities are the results of drowning after capsizing as the resuJt of poor handling, or paddling them out into the surf oria seaway. · If there is an increase in boating accidents and fatal· ities in the leg itimate boating circ les, we all want to know about it so ' measures can be taken lo educate the bad actors. But we d<>Q't Jik~ to see statistics fatt ened by the tragic errors of people who venture out on the water in peddling or paddling gimmidrs. Set them up in a category all their own -with surfboarders, surfers and even swimmers who also often drown because oi their own or someone else's· carelessness. ~w Fall Race Event H-n· nors Fred Harris I' Series 1 ·races for offshore crews a chanCe to get back to the club bar for a rehash of the race. It was the fateful third race that dropped them to second place behind Timothea Larr of New England. The reporter from Greenwich said the NHYC crew was· ,roundly cheered despite their last place finish. In the final two races sched u l·e d today Miss Newconib must beat Mrs. Larr by six boats in each race to win the title. Dick Deaver ln Wales Cup Finals THE BETTER NIOUSETRAP .THEORY ROLLS ON 'W1 tfcllri ... lirll -..1.i.-. !.!eh" " rM eMI fl l.u pa ... dt91 . , . ltlf Ulimnlfll 11114 •! Me11114 II l.0.1IM111111 "bnl 1 pclil It 1111 U..." Ow ll"Y ~ ....... : (l ig (1111) Thal's lhe 1yp1(ol ho-bum comment people mok• .~ .lllltil lhey 1taJ11e tb11t il's !rut! fYlRY BODY SAYS lOW '~ICES ... WE HAYE .JttfMI ll's no foncy-sman11y, mind-\ bendiflf i4eo ..• jusl the tallowing: saQboats are a common and popular lJW!g ~uring the spring and ~mmer months, but California Yacht Club has come with a 1 four.race Fall Series honoring the late Fred Harris. "The idea is to stage a se-- quel to tfie strenuous overnight spring races and to recapture the good fellowship among the serious ocean racers," said CYC Comm o dore Ed Sundberg. The North Aqierican match racing .championship f o r the Prince of Wales Bowl goes ~~_,h,..,,.,.., .. ·""'"n~""4M.,.Y"'l'-r down to the wire today with Dick. Deaver of Los Angeles Yacht Oub and Stephen Cuc· chiaro of fl.UT Nau t ical Association engaging in a best four of seven series. The event will be known as the Fred Harris Fall Series, the first race scheduled for Sunday, Sept. 16. The. t1eries is open· to Ocean Rac i ng, Performance Handicap and ~fidget Ocean Racing Fleet yachts. All four races are designed to finish in a sin&le afternoon to give skippers aOd Series standings will be b;S< ed on the results of all four races with a sepa r a t e perpetual trophy awarded to the winner in each of the three fleets. All races will start at the Marina del Rey "S" mark and finish inside the detached breakwater. In Tuesday's racing in cal· 25 sloops off Long Beach Harbor Deaver defeated Glen Foster of ~oroton Yacht Club, Long Island Sound 3-0. and Cuccl!taro defeated S k i p Moorhouse. Mantaloking YC, New Jersey 3--0. Clark Eyes Mallory ,Lead Brigantine, N.J., with 12. Two races are scheduled for Wednesday with the (inal race for the North American Sail· , ing championships slated for Thursday. JACKSONVILLE , Fla . (AP) -Dennis Clark or Seattle , Wash., won both races 'J'ues.. day to challenge for the lead in Mallory Cu p yacht com· Title Race Slated By South Shore petition. \ Clark trails leader Dr. John South Shore S'\i.l.ing Club of yachl clubs. Entries will be Jennings of St. Petersburg Ne wport Beach ~I spomor a accepted until race time. Race Mlh to 301,1 with three races to t w 0 • d a Y ~ cham· committee chairman J o h n <M. pionship regatta fO{ CSl·20s, Duffy said there will be five- •· Santann·22s, CaJ.25s, ·and San-. Clark, whose family built his tana·27! Sept. t5-J6. minute intervals between the boat, finished last in the open· Entry blanks and1 race start for each class with the ing race Mond'3y. He finished course information may~ ol> first class starting at 11 : 30 Tuesday's run 30 seconds 1~ta='in='ed'=a=t=SSSC'='=' =a=nd=ot=h=er=a':;r;:e=a=a=.m=. =ea=c=h=d=a'=y=. =====ii ahead of_ Jennings and Clarke • ~ 'nr:lmp&'On or Houston. l " 1 · d uefi It.. ~ A JackMuellerofBayVillage, VV1ln s I n10'~~~~-~~ Ohio is third with 26 points, _ ~ ', ~~..__ followed by Thompson ~·ith 24. Jim Miller of Oyster Bay, \ N.Y. is filth with 20 11 .. points, ahead of David Archibald of Halifax, Nova Scotia at 17, Roel Davis of Coronado, Calif., at 14 and John Keating of Lido Title Series Set Ed Rodriguei of Alamitos Bay .Yacbt Club heads the dwnpionshfp flight of tbe na· -tlooal-tldo>J~ whiclt st.ans a three race &erles for tbe champlonahlp today. 'l11e 33-boat bleet ..., divid· eel into two Olght> alttt the ring beat> 'l\l<llday. CONVENIENT INEXPENSIVE ATHLETIC CITING ~AFE Flilt :-;;;.~_ \ SPORTS ILLUSTRATED CALLS It "the l•te•t ••Hltlf cr•ze .• .'' IN,o:~~TI ON 17141 67l·l070 WRllDAYS CALL: 17141 '75-75H EVENJN5S Our ove1h1o4 is·sli,ed so low ii sends othe1 ti1e deale11 cowering to a c111ner with lheir thumb and blonkel. E1pen~v• buildings~ OU!! [,1pensive ch1ngers, hyd1oulic ~fls, el<? OUT! Our bu1ld1ngs ore stu/fed w1lh NOltllNG ... e1cept whol you came to buy in !he lust plac1! Piles ond piles ol P1emi11m Ti1es plus a man lo (olle<I the piddely pri<e we 1harge. INSTAll THEM? With Whal? Ou1 men (O rry only o pen to wrile 11p the order. Suri , hovein g o Se1v1ce Srohon in110U !hem is a httle e11ro trouble ... bu1 you'll lorgtl th11t a lot woner Tho n you'll lorger the ei1ro 50 to 100 bH(ks 01 mo11 you'll pay elsewhere! (We con recommend a s1atton that will b1 happy 10 oblige yeu tor oboul 1.25 o !11e ... ii youn won '!./ The overage large volume dealer has 2 or 3 salesmen out Iron!, 3 01•1nslollers <hugging 0·1ay, 11 Manoge11n his award-lined ofh<e lryi ng 10 look off1oal, 3 men 1n rhe back smoking, 1 dellve1r man al Shirley's dine1 having 101fee aml o Iran! end man diS<ussing lhe lnl1i1a(1tl of aligning her home w1lh a prelly cuslomer. In pla1e of 1h1s army, we have A mon ... sornetitnes TWO •.• wh1n w1'11 busy. It vo1ies from dectler lo deale1 ... but wt normoUy hove one man lo1 every 8 or 10 of lhe reg11la1 dealers. Baggies 1h1 mind, doe1n'11H The simple tacl Is CHEAP TIRES ARE A IOTT!N IUY! Th1y'1e bod for us ... ond lhey'1• bod for you. 01110 with re111ods! They give 111 guaron1ee problems ... lhey give you ter11btt mileage plus ol lhe v11y leosl ... mu<h less salety rhan o ,rem1um 1111. OUl Klll Y SPllNGFIEtO fl•ST UN! OR PllMIUM nt(S 011 guo1- ontted anywhere in the U.S .... in1lud1ng of coufst, 1ny T11t P11k-Up lacahon. Nope ... you don't have 111 1111\t us. We put it 1n w1~ting ... yo11 wo n'I even hove to ask. NO UPS •.• NO lllRASl !Trilt, but tru t) Ma ny d1o le1s toke your old 11111 In lracle .. And lhen zonk you 3 btrck~ mo11 11 1h1 ca~n1 hos hod ii. We never 1ho1ge 11111 for t bad llOdt·i" pr11na1ily bt· co11lt Wl N£Y(l TAK( TIR(S IN T•AO£. ~implt, 1eo1 and (ltan. Of count we kove lo charge !ht unavoidable fed11ol (~else Tor ond Srale Soles Tax. ,.S. -Old .U ... ;.I:.o !ires 01e 900~ far sw1A9s, rell!ng with a sTl<k or gi•• 10 ya11r pt! 9011110 10 ploy wilh. DON'T FORGET WESTMINSTER. NO 8,.LLOONS, HOT DOGS, pOPcORN OR FREE TRIPS ... (JUST TH~ SAME OLD SUP&R-LOW PRICES!). NO TRADE-INS REQUIRED# COlllrARE THESE LOW l'fllCES ~. : SIEll BEL llO RADIAL S 'FIRST LINE-POLYESTER "Mark 78" •PREMIUM POLYESTER ''Roodmurll '' W·l·D·E TIRES ;; .. • • • • " • ' ' , • . ' • • • 1 ' ' ' ( ' ~. • \ Is llave rocketing food costs put your meat courses out or sight? You can still feed large families or satisfy comPanY by stacking pasta1 cheeses, zucchinl or eggplant. Cottage cheese and zucchini are used to extend some ground beef in Rice . Casserole Italiano. The other two "recipes rely Oii herbs, Cheddar cheese and vegetables to substitute for meat. RICE CASSEROLE ITAIJANO 2 packages (10 ounces each) frooen zucchini or 1 quart sliced fresh zuc- chini l ROUnd lean ground beef l cup chopped onions I clove garlic, crushed 1 teaspoon each salt and basil 'h teaspoon oregano ¥.a teaspoon pepper 2 cups cooked rice 1 can (8 ounces) tomato sauce 1 cup cottage cheese l egg, beaten 1 cup grated Cheddar cheese Cook zucchini in boiling salted water about 2 to 3 minutes ; drain well saute ground meat, onions, garlic and seasonings witil 001005 are transparent. Stir in rice and tomato sauce. Blend cottage cheese and egg. Arrange half of the zucchini slices in a buttered shallow 2-quart casserole; spoon on meat-rice mixture. Spread cottage • cheese over meat mlxture. Top with re- maining zucchini and sprinkle with Ched- dar cheese. Bake at MO degrees for 20 to 25 minutes or until hot and bubbly. Makes 6 servings at 362 calories each. HERB ED CHEESE LASAGNA 9 curly lasagna noodles 2 ta~lespoons il\5tant minced onion 2 tablespoons water 3 tablespooos butter or margarine 1 can (15 ounces) tomato sauce If• cup parsley flakes, divided 1 teaspoon oregano leaves 1h. teaspoon salt lh teaspoon garlic powder Layering is one way to beautify economical ingredients. Spicy flavors will blend in baking. • 'S I _ trata Sp . . ?. ere .. ) • Y• teaspooo groWld black pepper 1 pound creamed cottage cheese -I cup shredded mild Cheddar cheese 8 ounces mozzarella cheese, sliced 2/3 cup !Oft bread crumbs 2 tablespoons melted butter or margar- ine 1 large tomato, sliced Cook noodles as package directs; drain ; set aside. Rehydrate minced onJon in water ror 10 minutes. In a medium saucepan heat the 3 tablespoons butter. Add onion and saute 2 minutes. Add tomato sauce, ! table- spooos ol the parsley Oakes, oregano, salt, garlic powder and black pepper. Bring lo bolling point. Reduce heat ; cover and simmer for 10 min~des. Combine cottage and Cheddar cheeses; set aside. Arra'nge 3 of the noodles in the bottom of a greased 10 x 6 x 2-lnch bak- ing dish. Spread with half of the cheese mixture. Top with U3 of tomato sauce. Place 3 more nocxlles over the sauce; top with mozzarella cheese and 1/3 of the tomato sauce • Cover ~th layers of the remaining 3. noodles, sauce and cheese mixture . • Cover with foll Bake in a preheated moderate oven (375 degrees F.) for 40 minutes or until bot. Mix bread crumbs with melted butter and remaining 2 tablespoons parsley flak.es. Sprinkle over tomato slices. Uncover casserole. Arrange tomato slices on lasagrut. Bake uncovered for 5 minutes longer or until tomatoes are hot. Serves 8. SOUTHERN VEGETABLE CUSTARD 11-& cup butter or margarine ¥4 cup all-purpose flour 2 cups milk 2 cups shredded mild Cheddar cheese, divided 3 tablespoons pa rsley flakes, divided 1 teaspoon onion powder ~• teaspoon marjoram leaves J,i: teaspoon basil leaves ¥.& teaspoon ground black pepper 3 eggs, lightly beaten l can (12 ounces) vacuum packed corn 2 cups diced zucchini 1 cup soft bread crumbs In a medium saucepan melt butter. Add flour. Cook and stir over low heat for 2 minutes. Bierut in milk all at once; ct>ok and stir until sauce is thickened. Mix In 111 cups of the cheel<: heat untll melted. ~ Remove from..hell ilnll otir In Z table- spooos of the parsley flakes, the onion powder, marjoram, bull a,00..black pep- per. Blend )some of the hot mixture into the eggs. Tum the' egg mlxtuno Into the chrese mixture in the saucepan; blend well. ' . Stir in com and zucchlni. Pour into a greased 211.quarl casoerOI<:; Mix bread crumbs with remainiDg ~ cup cheese and I tablespoon parsley flakes; sprlokle over top of casserole. Cover caseerOJe and place in a baking pan. Pour in about l inch of hot water. Bake in a preheated moderate oven (S50 degrees F.) for 1 bJur. Remove cover and bake about 45 minutes lqer « until a knife inserted in center comes out clean. Serves 6. ~men BEA ANDERSON, Ed itor CAROL MOORE, Food Editor WMl!tscll 'fi AllllUll 2', 1t7' P'IM !t I 'Uphill, Curvy Road • • • Easy on the Gravy' • A piping hot lunch, cheery noontime visit and, supper in a sack. These ere the welcome benefits that confined senior ciUzens receive from the Meals on 'Wheels program that ls gaining momentum ln South Laguna~ and Hun· tington Beach. · In both cases the food is prepared by hospital dietitians -at Huntington lntercommunity and south Coast C.Om· munlty hospitals -and dispatched by volunteers associated with Conununity Service Councils. Moot ol tbe north county volunteers belong to the American Assocjation of Relired Persons, ollering peer mmpany, while teenage Candystripera -deliver Laguna meals, providing a good chance for the gencratloos to get acquainted. 1be meal Strvice costs $12.50 for the five weekda7s for sublOl'lbers 1'bo are referred by doctors, ministers, vtslllng nurses and aocial workers or CODCtrMd friends. Originally designed as a social concern to make sure oldsters get proper nutri- tion, the program is expected to grow as sui\Ormafket food prices Increase.< The prosram ts not Intended f~ Iota! lnvalldsr The partlclpanl must be a~le lo have the table oet, prepare breakfa'.st and ,...loend meals. l\larie Cook, community lt!fvlces ~lnator at Soulh coast, has checked out"lhe piOCe<lure tllO~ · "how fut you can go around comers wtlh hot gravy on the seat besl<le you," A navigator accompanies each driver and both stay at the destination to chat while the client has lunch. '"!his projecl Is certainly needed. It's fine for people in later years to want lo be independent and live al home but we have to keep them from deteriorating on tea-and<rumpets nibbling'," Mrs. Cook said. The program has been handled by churchwomen' In other commwtities but hospitals are providing the service as a follow-up for former patients -"we're still responsible for their well-being" - and other parties who request proper nutritioo. When Eiean<r Quinn, a candystriper, heard of the project, she recruited friends from her human ecology clasi. She describes her contrlbuUon as a cheer-up campaign, explalnil1g that "'le see if they need 1K1ythlng or want somelhing done.11 That's {he allitude !hat moUvates the program and occupies volWlteers for about 90 minutes per day. They pick up ·oven-fresh food at the hospitals at 11:45, !revel and talk. Dorothy Slemann, food services dife<>. tor al HWlUngton Intercommun.ity, said .resppnse bas been ''very enthusiastic" to date. With e mallmwn of 20 clients, bolh proarams want to build well coordinated, volunteer bases. w.rUtecl ~..,. may contact the Mme8--<:ooi and Slemann, or "Mrs. Gertrude Dandurand, -in Hun-tington Beach or auxiliary members of South Coast Conununlly Hoopital. Marie Cook checks the cafeteria inventory at South Coast Community Ho spit al to see that foods are ready for Meals on Wh ee ls. Volunteers deliver the food during th e noon hour to se nior citizen s, providing prop er nutrition arid cheerfuln ess. ' • I • ... Students Kept on Their Toes . Two of the three Southern California young women acce pted to the National Academy ot Dance in Champaign, Ill. are from Newport Beach. Classes will begin Tuesday, Sept. 4, for Jenni· fer Carey nett), daughter of the Andrew A. Careys, and De· anne Horton, daughter of the Jeff R. Hortons. Both senior members of the Newport Ballet Co., they have danced in many local productions including "The Nutcracker" at the John Wayne Theater, Knoll's Berry Farm. TV Fame in 'Jeopardy' Questioning Pays Off . I . By JO OI..SON Of tt1t Dtllr ,Uot ll1H Want to play a quick game of "Jeopardy?" Okay. Here are some answers. What are the ques- tions? The Q>okle Monster. TaDyrand. Sutter'• Estate. Faulkner. U you figured out the que,. Uons, you could have been cholen along with Evelyn Thomu of Newp<rt Beach to be 1 guest on 11Jeopardy" In New York. 'Ibese were some of the . questlonl she was asked dur-.;...· lni her recent appearance on the quiz show, which was ·~ taped In June and released ·-1everal weeks ago. ~;. It'! hard to come up with ·~the ri ght questions in front or .; the television cameras with all ~· the studio lights glaring, com- .; mented Mrs. Thomas, wife of .., the Rev. Jack Thomas, an assistant minister at S t . Andrew's Presbyterian Church. ·•• BIG WL'iNER ~ "Sitting here 1 answer • • thoulandJ of doliara "'°rth of "'. queaUons," she said bl the liv· .~. Jng room of her apartment. :. The Thomases came to ~ Newport In February from ".. Ithaca, N.Y. where he was "I' auociate pastor o f a . ~ Presbyterian church. ,.. When Mrs. Thomas found , she would be traveling back to New York in June for her ·-; aon 111 wedding ahe wrote and ·'. aaked to be a contestant on .. • the show. , She wu !Jeni a choice of in· ~ terview dates and chosen after ~ answering a aeries of sample :_. quesUons from the show. .:'.1· "They love 10 have out-of-toJA'n ~ contestanta," Airs. Thomas oboerved. • She was told to show up at the studio one Wednesday _, morning for either a Wed- nesday or Thursday taping. Three showl are taped each •• day, '"" Aid, and her1 hap. ' pened to be one ol the !Int to • be made. Al a warm-up for lhe 1bow, •· the oontemnta were told that • · "there are only two Haton• ~ people fO on this 1how -ego , and greed, and both were ao- ceptable traits." llEST SUllJECl'S •• H .. favorite caterorle• are -·a por t1 , 1eoarephy, hlot«)' and tlw! Bible. She admitted &he was afraid of the Bible category on the show because she was afraid she would miss and look like a fool, being a minister's wife. This is not the first television appearance for Mrs. 'nxnnas, a graduate I n Spanish from UCLA. ("Don't ask me to say anything," she laughed.) Sile was oo the quiz !how "Concentration" in 1965,' also in New York, where she won a aet of luggage. "We cell It our gold·plated llllgage," the Rev. Thomas said. His wife explained that she had !<> pay her way to and from New York City twice and stay overnight once before she was on the show. Her winning!! on "Jeopardy" were $150 and a set of en- cyclopedia wh.lch has not ar- rived yet. NtJI' ADDICTED Lest ahe se<;m like a minister's wife ' who does nothing but watch quiz shows on TV, she explained that she likes them because "we have four children and we always played a lot of games" and she "knows a lot of trivia from reading." ("Jeopardy" contestanta mu.at be versed 1n trlvla.) , Mrs. 'Ih>mu also has ap. peared on te!evlalon In coo· junctloo with her work u director of the Crtsl• Counsel· Ing Service In Ithaca, a telephone service manned by persons trained in "creative listening. tt "She's the TV star" the Rev. Thom a 1 comnlented. "But we have to eat on my salary." Though she primarily con- siders her role In life to be "Jack's wife," Evelyn 'Ibomas has been active ln PTA, was a by-Une columnist for a northern California newspaper and has done e lot of church work. She enjoys sewing and awimming and has camped on vacations with her family, wh1ch includes Dan , I 6; Rebecca, now a Huntington Beach resident ; Ken, a new Marine Corps orflcer and craduate of Annapolis, and Bob. 27, now llVlng In Mon· treat PET PE!VES Conlldered outapokerl by her family and friends, Mn . 'Ibomu has several p e t Mrs. Evelyn Thomas of Newport Beach reads a variety of current event magazines to k11p up on international affairs tnd miscellaneous f1 ct1, both of which pa y off on TV game show appearances. peeves and several favorite cau>el she Uke1 to champion . She gel! upoet "when 101Deone findl out I'm a minlster'1 wtfe and they start apologi•lni for not going to church or the language they U1e.'' And ahe atrongly believes "there la a role f o r parapn>ft11lonals In the me•· tal htalth field." Wluit will be the next televtalon venture for Evelyn Thomu, who ''.loves new ex.· p!rlenoes"? Since NBC har a rule that a person can only be on two NBC game shows In their ll!etln\e, she 11 con1lderln1 1wltchlng networl<I 1nd trying another qo!1 !how. "I've been toylnt with the Idea of being on 'Pusword,'" she said. Now about those ''Jeopardy " answers. Check yourself. Here are the questions . The Cookie Monster: What Is an animal on Sesame Street that eats taoos? Tallyrand : Who tlved in the United Sttes in the 17806 and wrote a book trying to talk Napoleon out of s e 111 n i Lo1.d1lana? J. Paul Getty : Who~ f' English estate, called Sutler's Estate, do tourists pay Sl .25 to go through ? Faulkner: Who was a Southem-bom noveli st who wu a poet -oerorc liecomfng a aovellat ? How much u'Ould you have won? . - 'Losers' Gain • Long Run DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'd like to say il word lo "Born Loser" because I, too, ~·us the ugly duckling in our family . ~1y older sis ter inherited all the looks and personalit y. No. one could believe we were related. 1 My nwthcr didn't bother much with me. I was plain-looking and overweight, so there was no Uie wasting tilpe on a girl who was such a mess. My father \vanted a boy and I wa9 1upposed to be it. \Vhen I \Vasn't, he got even by ig- noring n1c. It \l'aS my wonderful eighth grade teacher \1:ho gave me a sense of personal worth. She encouraged me to study hard and gain recognition through achleve- ment and kindness to others. I won a scholarship, lost weight and began to feel like somebody. In my last year of college I married a wonderful young man. \Ve have a beautiful famil y and a good life. Things didn't go too well for my sister. She married a handsome, 1 a z y skirtchaser and they have been separated three times. The years of unhappiness show. She Ms gotten heavy and developed some physical problems because of ber weight. I hope you will print this letter so "Born Loser" will know it's a terrible mistake to COW1t herself out because she got off to a bad start. She can come from behind and win if she has the will to do . It. -I DID. DEAR SECRETARIAT: Tbank1 for-lbe word from the feedbox . Beautiful! Just Beautllo!I DEAR ANN LANDERS: A periOll l us- ed to work with -and who now ls retired -told me he had attended slx wakes and 17 funerals in the past tvro months. "The food ts usually delicious," he said. When I remarked that I thought it was a pity so many of his friends and relatives had passed away he said, "The departed weren 't friends or relatives. Some of them were strangen. I go to wakes and funerals because there 's nothinJ on TV worth looking and and the movies these days are 10 dirty." ts thll man a sadist or is he ju1t plain bookers? -TIIE GHOUL Poe!. OEAR-4 G.P.: I'd say he Is more frreload r tbu 1adl1t. I don't Jtl' the Im· pre1sl~· t h e r e 11 MD)' emo.- t.lonal tavolvement whatever. Ht'I Ju1t took!Jl1 for frte food and 1 little -· pany. Planning • wedding? What'• rtaht? What's wrong? AM Landec"1'11 completely new "The Brlde11 Ctuldt" wUI relieve your anxiety. To receive 1 copy, ttnd • dollar bill, ptua a long, ,.u.addrellld, stamped envelope (19 cent• podlftgt) to Ann Landers, Box. 33£6, Ollcngo. Ill. 60654. NOT CONFIDENTIAL TO A LL READE;RS: Tile poem, .. Pordon Me, Doctor, But May I Ole '' wns sent by an anonymous reader who irnu&:ined he w111 the author. The real author aubllquontly identified himself. lie is R.B. Richards o( Pftl08 Verdes Estates. The pocn1 was inspired by yean as a volunteer at Harbor General Hospital In Torrance. Wt are hippy to glve full credit to Richard• !or a piece of superb writing . ~ ;,/ I PRE-LABOR OAY SAlE P•WALE CORDUROY Hit holirjc. L-L1llor Doy ,.1cel V....tll• I~ co-..,,i,..,. lo '"'"' aoll d color•. v .. r ~ ••• Mt for i••per1, 1irl1' pl••'-N•, "" fall ... cks. D•tlll'• l•nttt.1. AS'' wide. Mochin• w1ah, 4ry. YD • e CENTERS • 100% POLYllTIR DOUBLE KNITS Lallor Dlf S,..1111 Wa'ft •lllra4 ......... lookt11 kalt1 ..., ..... ; H•dr 4o1l l"" 1 ...... a 11 rl~ti w1ffl• wff•••, ch•cka, twlll1, •ulft.c•l•r• •4 11ore. 60'1 wl .. , 1 " "'""'""' "···· 44 ·YD. MES A 841 W. 19th 11 Pl1ctntl1 Ph: 645-7832 Dally 10-6 Clo1od Sunday ---DRICES· GOOD WE·D. THRU SAf.-AUGUS+-2f-$11lT~l • • • .High Hopes Sewn For Lasting Knot By LAURIE KASPER I was just sitting there, hair awake, gazing at the partially assembled pieces or sheer white and pink yardage bunched on the floor in front or me. - Scattered all around on the sha~ carpet were Sl'raps of the material, numerous loose threads, pieces of the tissue pattern. scissors, pins and other sewing notions and a half cup of cold coffee. I shifted my position only a little bit but it was enough to knock the ct1p over. I'd given up drinking it any- way when, between the first and second ripping of the same faci ng seam, I dropped a pin into its muddy blackness. Now all I had was a stained rug and a stray straight pin. According to my digital clock radio, it wa s 2:43 Saturday morning. As I focused on the nu- merals, a most horrible thought passed through nly mind. I asked myself, "Why do 1 have friends? And why do they have to get married?'' I didn't really mean it. 1 thi nk it was ju.st a way or venting my weariness and frustration. I immediately and sharply repri· manded myself. It was for a friend and her wedding that I was sitting in the middle of this mess. Another's wedding had me in a similar state just two months ago. After lts first and only wearing for the wedding and reception Saturday, this dress I was laboring on will be doomed to hang next to the other one in my closet. Bridesmaids dresses always look like bridesmaids dresses ... not quite my usual style. But I'll have to admit it was my own fault that I was st uck at the sewing machine for the weekend . I had procrastinated for at least four weeks and there was no more time left to put it off. It just takes me a while to get turned on to weddings. The white Corms announcing other couples' unions come into our office in a steady stream. especially in June and August, 'Vhile we treat them with respect, they are a part of the rouUne. So. too. were all the weddings J was invited to alter my col· Iege graduation several years ago. The punch, cake, sociability. forced formality and pledge to "love, honor and cherish" all usted the same to me. But the real reason I take so long to get excited about wed· dings is that I've seen the dreams of too many of my friends :ind acquaintances diminished into the hardness and hurt of divorce. I grow older. wiser. more independent but no less idealistic. I know this just as I know the answer to my early morning ques· tions. For me, love and friend ship, both celebrated in the marriage proceedings, are the most valuable assets in life. I'd stay up any number of nights and spend all my week ends to make a wedding day the wa y a friend wants it. ll''i 1 ;n1all ,f. fort in hopes the happiness on th.is one day continues through all their days . I wish' the same for all those whose announcements we rou- tinely write for the paper. IRON PANTS GUARANTEE lllt 1,brk .. ~ (Oflllt\lctlon of 1hh .~,.._ ~ bffft ~lc,11'1 qlMfttd to flve U'l "'°~DINAIY WfAlt II !he .. -, dt!et flOI ~ //lff'f alml*Mlle pll'IMllt. ~ p tCJmt>t••• -·· .,,l\f""'°", lht ~ ll'ltY.,. retumtd lor 1Rtvncl •• 11\t pl¥f' ol put(~ wn.n 11«onip.nltd 11'1' !hit '""...i" i.1 #Id '°"' .. IH111«11$11. t center 644·5070 \ Co,ast Couples Recite Nuptial PORTER-FATE Roberta fl1arie Fate and ~11ch:iel Adam Porter. seniors at Ca!Uomia State Un ive rsity, San Jose 1vere marrit.'<i in the ~1csa Verde United Pfll'lhod isl Church. Costa ~lcsa. 111e Rev, Lothair Green di rected the vow exchange for tilt d:Jughter of Mr. and ?.1rs. George C. Fate 0£ Costa Mesa and the son of the James ~1. Porters of Ceres. Attendants were the Roberl \Vestons, Stephen 1'"' a l e s . Robert Fates. Darleen and Dorcayne Fate, Larry Porter, Deneen Fate, and D a le Laitinen. The bride is a graduate of Estancia High School and eamcd an AA degree ut Orange Coast College. l~cr husband Is a graduate of Ce res High School and rccCI\'· cd an AA degree fron1 Modesto C.Ollege. They will reside in San Jose. EGGERS-MAROSZ Caryn Helene l\1arosz and Richard Reece Eggers Y.'ere 1narried dw-ing double ring rites perfor1nl'<i by the Rev. Edward Caldwell in th e Geneva Presbyterian Church, Laguna Beach. They are the daughter and son or Mr. and Mrs. Marion l\1arosz of l\fu.sion Viejo anti Edn1und Eggers of El Toro. Bridal attendants w e r e Claudia Marosz, Susan Fulton, Pam Gruszka, Kathy Knut sen and Ellen Weaver. Attending the bridegroom were Jool. Fred and Keith Eg- gers, Craig DuVal, David J ay. l\fa"k Fulton and D a I e Dickerson. The newly"·cds. who y.·ill Jive in San Luis Obispo, are students at Cal Poly. She is a home ecoMmics major and he is a history and accounting major. Rolh are graduates or ri-rission \1iejo High School and Saddleback College. LONG-TUZ Cindv Lou Tuz became the bMde ·of John Gilbert Long during nuptial ceremonies in Lhe First Uni led ·Methodist MRS. EGGERS Church of Costa Mesa. 1'hc bride, daughter of Mr. and ,.1rs. \\1alter W. Tuz of &lnta Ana Height$. "'as at· tended by TaJ ;i Tuz. Cheryl Dunlea. JoElle rield and Carrie Tuz. Attending as st man was George Long , while ushers \\'ere William 1''ry J r. and Thomas Tu2. The bride Is a graduate oI Corona de! Mar fligh School a nd th e Cati rornta J>rofesslonal College or Costa Mesa. Her husband. son of the Donald W. Longs of Irvine, is a graduate of Mission Viejo High School and Saddleback College. They \\•ill reside in Anaheim. MAHAN-SMITH Yorba Linda Friends Church was the selling for U1e mar- riage linking Karen !vlae Stnilh and Nicholas Charles Mahan. Their parents are Mrs. ~fax Wagoner of Huntingto.n Beach, J. Cletus Smith of Joplin, 1'.fo. and ~Ir. and Mrs. John Mahan of Yorba Linda. Attend ants were ihe Misses Lynette Z e b r o w , Gail Cleveland and Melissa Marino, Brad Hickm;in , Jack Cleveland and Ted Nowak. Of· ficiant was the Rev. H. Glenn Shaffer, The bride v.·as graduated from l\1emo.rial High School, Jopli n and received an AA degree from Santa A n a College. Her husband y.•as graduated from Troy Hi gh School, Fullerton, attended the University of Ca Ii torn i a, Riverside and now is studying at California Stale Universily, Fullerton. RICHARDSON-FOLEY Judith Foley and Michael L. Richardson, both of Hun - tington Beach. e x c h a n g e d vows and rings before the Rev. Carl Inga lls in the Costa i\1esa Golf and Countrv Clllb. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Leslie C. Foley of Thermal and l\1r. and f\1rs. Rolland P. Richardson of Oran,:?e. Honor attendants we re MRS. LONG MRS. PORTER MRS. RICHARDSON Diana • Gaed.ig and \Valter Roach. Others were l\irs. Ste phen Hickman, C a r a 1'arini. William Barnsdale and Thomas Hill. The bride is a graduate of Chapman CoUege where she will be working on her masters degree. Her husband attended Golden \Vest C:Ollege. They will reside in Huntington Beach. HARRIS· VENARD Catherine Dawn Venard and ~1ack L. Harris were married MRS. HARRIS MRS. MAHAN in Calvary Chapel. Santa Ana with the Rev. Tom Stipes of· ficiating. Their parents are l\1r. and Pwtrs. Charles R. Venard and Mr. and l\Irs. l\1ack L. Harris, all of Costa Mesa. Attendants \VCre L a u r a Carter, l\1rs. Jim Gross, Beth Venard. Sydne H u w a i di , Richard B. Harris, Gordon Kahre , Joe Smith, Tony Greenway and Jack Kehler. The bride is a graduate or Estanci<l High School and now attends Orange Coast College where her husband earned an A.4. degree. He is a graduate of Corona del l\13r High School. The newlyweds will reside i.n C:Osta Mesa. LAC~O-LANGDON I-Jome in Huntington Beach are Terry Lacko and his bride, the form er l\1arsha Langdon "'ho exchang~d nuptial vov.•s and rings in St. 1_3arbara's Catholic Church. Santa Ana . Their parents are the Daniel Lackos of Huntington Beach and the Leo R. Langdons of Fountain Va lley . Attendants \\'ere Ch r i s Langdon . Tricia L an g d on . Beth Cilleny.•ater. Kath ie Larson, Tom Allanson. Tim Brown, Dan Lacko and Ted Do\YC. The bride is a er~du-ite or Fountain Valley High Sehool and Orange Coas! Collc r.:r. \Yhere her husband is a stu- den t. lie graduated fro1n Ma rina l:l igh School, Hun- tington Beach. · BURGER-PRIDONOFF Lutheran Church of the l\1aster, Corona del Mar \\'as the setting for the marriage linking Susan Pridonoff and William Burger. The Rev . Lawrence Fruhling directed the vow exchange for the daughter of Capt. (ret.) and Mrs. Eugene Pridoooff of Santa Ana Heights and the son of Mr. and Mrs. 0 . D. Burger of Arcadia. Maid of honor was Sara Erickson and best man was Eugene Johnson. Serving as bridesmaids were Cindie \llatS-On, Robin Ellis and Karel French. while ushers were Donald \Verner, Ron Ramuz •JLOT 31'· Vows · MRS. LACKO and Tom Prldonofr. The bride is a graduate of Corona del l\otar Hi&h School and is a senior at the University of C a I i f or n i a , Riverside where her husband graduated. He also is an alum- nus of Arcadia High School They will reside in IU\'erside. DETHIER-LANCASTER Making 1heir home in Ft. Wolters. Tex. will be Navy f_,t. Gerard Dethier Jr .. and his bride, the former Susan Faye Lancaster who ~·ere married in the All Faith Chripcl, China Lake. Chaplain Jack Sm i l h performed the double ring ceremony for the daughter of the Zane G. Lancasters of Ridgecrest and the son of the Gerard Dethiers of Costa r-.1esa. Maid of honor was Jane f\.1iller; bridesmaids ""ere Mrs. Gary Johnoon and Mrs. Philip Lancaster; best man was Brian Dethier and Christian Johnson served as ring bearer. Ushers were Don \Vade, Chris Y.1heeler, John Kvasnicki and John Duenes. The bride is a graduate of Richtecrest High School and Caii1ornia State University. San Diego where her husband also graduated. He is an alwn- nus of Corona del Mar High School and ctuTently is un· dergoing flight training at Ft. \\'olters. . . . W~ntsday, A119ust 29, 1~73 oroscope: Virgo ~ses Greative Resources THURSDAY bridge of coodwlll. Basic Au ""ST cbanc• occurs 1n .peraonal en-, """ 30 •1rooment. You may have to Br~ OlolAlll a<l)list to bizarre situation. It "' illo''illool> c11ann1ns is temporary. Walt. I~' )lulel Blair. . TAURUS (Aprll ZO.May 20): tlarlan who may know Obtain valid hint from Aries •~thing, acoonllil& to him: memge. AvQJd nishlng. Make Whn Davidson. Aqua~ who. gesture of reconciliation to · :niay be too, talented tor his family member. Relatives :.-:own iood: Nonnan Maller. An disagree but It Is not '8.IJ..tlme ravorite Leo : Mae necessary for you to be<xlme West. Most gifted Scc:s'plo involved. ?i.f.aintaln neutral 'COmedlan : Jonathan Winters. stance. Ta~.who feels "the future GEMINI (May 21.Jwie 201: is now : George A 11 en . EmoUons c Q u l d dominate. Aquarlan who co u Id 1c-Avoid permitting impulse: to eurately prodlct the future : block out logic. Give yourself Evangeline AdalDI. time to analyze. Pl1et1, Virgo ARIES (March 21-April Iii: may be Involved. See persons, Lie low. Let otiters make events as they actually are. declaq_tions. Permit mate, not through haze of wtshtu.l ner to lead the 'vay. Ac· thinking. cent public relations. Build CANCER (June 21.July 22 ): :. i ~.P~tDe.a&~ ~~~~ ........ ~~'~ 1 To avoid di¥Ppointment, prospective ,.,,. brides are reminded to have their wedding llortes With black and white glossy photo- graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women's De- partment one week before the wedding. Pictures received after that time will not be used. For engagement announcements it is imperative that the story, _also accompanied by a bl•.ck and white glossy picture, be sub- mitted six w~eks or more before the wedding date; otherwise it will not be published. To help fill requirements on both wed· ding and engagement stories, forms are available in all the DAILY PILOT office s. Further questions will be answered by Women's Section staff members at 6424321. THE NEW LOOK! is at •.. m,ff;ej WIGS emon'S SPORTSwEAR , s«clitf Plaza, 17th and Irvine, wport Beach,C'a;Jifomia92660 & 8.oouty . Solon 2~ I. 17rti St • .:-·--54W446 .. ~14 .... He•ra: ,..,..,, .... medical weight~ reduction OMEGA'S ... OGRAM IS THE SAfE METHOD UNDER STllCT MEDICAL SUPfl V1$t0N Of MEDICAL DOC· TOIS. LOSE UNWANTED POUNDS ANO MAINTAJN N<>nl WftGHT. Omega Clinic OOSTA MESA 646-1633 1169 NEWPORT BLYD. ANAH•IM 77MM1 1U4 W, Hwy. ... NOTE OUR 2nd LOCATION You lace add It ion a 1 responslblUty. Nothlnc Is apt to come easy, But ttlllltt ob- tained will be valuable . Persist. Refuse to be dra"'" off track ol ultimate goal. Don't sell )'<>Ill' ellorts short. Caprleon ~d be In picture. LEO (July23-Aug.12): Take special care during short trips. Confusion seenui to be order o! day. Don't acatter (prces. Do Qlle thblg at a time. Finish project. Artl.stic eUort runs in- to roadblock. However, end rewlts are worth trouble. · VIRGO (Aug. 13-Sept. 22 ): Utilize c r e a t i v e resources. Cost ..,tlmates may be high - obtain impartial appraisal. Leo, Aqurfu1 might be In pic- ture. Accent is o.n money, personal possesslorui. Payment could be defaulted. Strive !or fresh start. LIBRA (Sept, 2}-0ct. 22 1: \'ou may have. to do some tearing down for the purPose of "building. Trust hunch. Gi\'e full play to intuitive ill- tellect. What served Jn past may not suffice. Streamline procedUttS. Consult w I t h Aquarius, PreaUge is on the line. SCORPIO (Oct. tl-Nov. 21 1: Social activity accelerates. You may be part or a club or group ctlebratloo. Purchase o.f gift now could ahow that you care. remember. Sagtttarlu1, Gemlnl penons could be featured . Keep promise to friend who ls temporarily hnn- dicapped. SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21 ): Friends may act in manner that s ug gests r estlessness, dissatisfaction, disturbance . Look behind scenes (Of answers. Scorpio could play llgnlllcant role. Don't put too much reliance now o.n promises. Say "no" to money proposal. CAPRICORN (Dec. U.Jan. 19): If you go slow, you make advance. If you try to akip detalls, you repeat steps. The choice Is yo.ur own. Gemlnl. Virgo persons figure prom- inently. Emphasis ls on how high you want to go -and your lin\etable. Weigh Costs. One in authority may ~ angry. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18 ): Trri\"el and educatiQMJ areas are subject to abrupt change. l<'amily consideraUons are in\'olved. Be diplomatic. But make clear that your thoughts are your own -not to be molded 0:r dictated by others. Take a stand. You can do so in kind, mature manner. PISCES (Feb. !&-March 201: Bills, invoices demand at· tentk>n. See picture clearly. Don't obscure facts. }<'ace issues as they actually exist. One you may have been taking for granted speak! frankly, ShQw appreci.atioo, not resent- ment. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you have great ability to laugh at own foibles. Basic change and travel op- portunity shown !or October. Diet and nutrition shou]d be high on yQUr list -neglect here creates special problems for you. ~1any born under Gemini and Sagittarius are drawn to you. You are percep- tive and bright -nice to have arow•Uhe house . Joyce Ann Kutsch, 19, of Pennsylvania , joined Army and become first woman in the notion's history lo enlist for airborne training. Sha hopes to make Army her career. New Recruit:. Real ·r rooper Pl'ITSBURGH (AP ) Joyce Ann Kutsch wanted to be a military policewoman. But she's settling for the paratroops, becoming the first female recruit for the Army's rugged airborne combat rorps. The 19-year-old ex·physical education major, who was elected "most athletic'' by her ~igh school graduating class, was !worn in at a ceremony Tradition DALLAS -Dr. Hennan Kahn, director ol the Hudson Institute, expects what he calls a •'coonter·re!onnation" -a reaction to the youth movement -re-<:reating more traditional American economic values. Kahn says the next genera· tion of college youth will here Thunday. She reports ror WAC basic tralnlug In Sep- tember. Joyce, however, will never see actual oombat, the Anny said. But it she completes her training successfully she will be qualified to jump in emergency situations a n d possibly in Army exhibitions. Joyce, the youngest of seven children said she doesn't think she 'II have any trouble making the grad e in competition with male recruits. "JC you think you are better than the guys, go out and prove it." she said. She left Buller County Com- munity College after her first yea r, when employment pros- pects in secondary education began to look dim, and decid- ed to enlist. · "My mom thinks it's great if that'• what J want to do but nobody else believes I really am going to do it," Joyce ad- ded. for jump training and doesn't foresee any a djus tme nt problems. "You just have to put yourself in with them (men) and look at yourself as one of them,'' she says. Joyce's approval ror airborne training, the Army said, is part of the expansion of WAC recruitment which has opened an but 48 of some 300 service job classifications for women. The 48 restricted fields are rombat classified.· Initially, Joyce wanted to 1jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiil revolt again.!t t h e i r in-join the Army P.1Ps, but that ll structors, what he calla the segment of the service -~L":;""~~S: heirs of the free-speech move. another recently opened to • M Foretold ment of the sixties; in a "kind women -had a full quota. ANNING'S of backlash movement which Joyce remains unroncerned CoLLECTORS entphasizes more or less tradi-lhtt the will be the only SHOP ~ tiooal An1erican values." woman a.t .Fort Benning, Ga., 2•2a N.-o'"' BLva.. CO•TA ,.. ...... , CAL.I .... The Hudson Institute is a l -;;~;;;:;;;;;e,;;;;:;;;;;.;,;es~~·~·~•~"~"~' ~~-·~·~ .. ~·,.~·=' .. ~Ill public policy r e s e a r c h organization. ~ PU·BLIC NOT·ICE . BECAUSE OF THESE UNSETTLED TIMES , YAMATO RESTAURANT WISHES TO ANNOUNCE, WE ARE MAINTAINING: N FOUNTAIN VALLEY PLAZA~-. THE SAME MODERATE PRICES Dinn ers 53.95 to $6.05 ; Luncheons from $1.95 FOUJfTAIN j VALLEY < COAST MUSIC OfttYl IN § SERVICE ~ pponing In Septtmbtr ,.ttll "A Stock from Bach to Rock" ' Pianos • Organs Sheet M.u-sic--• "'°ru-ms 1 Guitars • Band Instruments ***Rent Sollool ln1tru1111ent1 now •Ith Out Uni~ MOnTH•to•llOnTH 'Pion $fOf9 •I ,, l«ltfd on ti» COmK of HlltJor ¥Jd NIWtlOrf -Com MM • 6'6-027' THE SAME GENEROUS PORTIONS No reduction in our servings THE SAME SUPERB SERVICE By our efficient, kimono-clad \V&itresse1 WE WELCOME AND HONOR YOU ~va•ato ~60 FAS HI ON ISLAND, NEWPORT CENTER RESERVATIONS HONORED: (714) 644-4811 THE CLOTHES HORSe -215 Merino Ave,. Bolbo.I l1lond c .... ,1 .... SUMMER CLEARANCE 11z PRICE SALE AL( O•l•INAL MUCHANDISI PANTSUm -LON• DllSSIS SHORT Damn -ILOUSll, ITC. Stilt I · 11 OPEN 10 A.M, -6 P.M. 11111tAmtrlclN Mltltr Cllllll **SALE** TURQUOISE INDIAN JEWELRY Squash Bi-m Necklaces from $185.00 Rings from $6.00-aracelets from $9.95 The "REAL THING" at'1SENSIBLE°PRICES MACHEN'S -208 Marine, Balboa Island · • a delightful budget salon t1Jhere beatttifttl hair styles begin . PRICE LIST CIE11tr1 Cllarp P:er L""9 Mtlrl MONDAY THRU THURSDAY Fll.IDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY PRICES SLIGHTLY HIGHER Sh•mpoo ond Set ...................................... $2.IO & op. Permanent W•ve ...................................... 7.10 & wp r;.1 ........... _ .................... _ ......................... 5.5o a ., Bleoch Touch -up ...................................... .10.511 & lljt Frostin9 ··························-························-·14.00 & IP Semi Permanent L1shes ····-··········· ........... 10.00 haircuts 51.50 1695 Irvine Ave. -· Costa Mesa Corner of E. 17th St.-Above L1 C1v1 Restaur1nt 645-1050 548-9986 0,. ..,., a.11. I ,_.,,. CLEARANCE f:INAL 3 DAYS DRESSES I GOWNS COSTUMES ODDS 'N ENDS Regularly Up To $35.95 2 FOR $20. Regularly up to $65 .95 Regul•rly from $69.95 up 2 FOR $25. 2/3. OFF SPECIAL Thursday, Friday, Satmday PANTL SUITS 20% OFF l-"""'---'515-E.-COAST-HWY-. -1---1-- •t MacArthur PH : 673·2900 • Turkey Meats Easy Pizza Two cX America's favorite foods . . . plua and . turkey . • • team up In this OljSY recipe to create a dellclous variation sure to please famil y and guests . The secret of suc- c~is Js the pew ground turkey meal now available at l"'l n1eat counter of your market. Tender, Ju icy and full of flavor, ground turkey browns as fast as ground bee[ and ls perfect for p8ckaged dinners, casseroles,, and n e r~ a t y 1 e "burgers!' Ile high nU\J'itionaJ v;il~e and low ~ mjike t.ooe of today's best meat buys. "Turkey Pizza" takes only 1ninutes to prepare, tht crust pre-baked for 10 minutes before meat, sauce and cheese are added. The !iliished pizza, bubbly hot and golden crusted, is ready to serve 2D minutes later. Ideal for quick summer .su~ pers, y oung get.(ogetbers, patio or pool parties. If the crowd ls big or extra hungry, better make several. The recipe feeds 4 to 6 depending upon appetites. Prepared from thigh and drumstick meat of fresh young . c((i ~: ~;Al~--,, 1 _.1 _ ~~7ocd0~ __ -..=c_. •• . .-· '_ -~J-'.· c' .. -~.: ' 608 EAST BALBOA BLVO., BAL BOA __ . _;,.:_:-REFRIGERATED DELIVERY SERVICE: PHONE 673-8310 . ··~~....,.&:'-~. SPECIALS FOR THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY, AUGUST 30, 31. & SEPTEMBER 1 RIPE' N' RED BART·LETI· CHERRY . ; ' PEARS c LB. • • TOMATOES . '. a basket o,_ I •·•· to 7 P·•· -1 hyt • W.... We ,...,.. ftle ritllt to ll•lt 41.-tlttes. Ope11 I •·•· to 7 p.a. - 7 0.,. • W ... -· BEEF SALE !-- ~::l: .......... LI. 8 9 c: CllCK a· ,.-. ROAST .......... LI. 9c ..... $149 ROUND STEAK •• LI. litt~E .. : ....... !.189 ~:1~A~~~~~. !$.1999 -WI 1s CLOD ROAST •••• LI. . $249 5Piiic1R STEAK LI . ... uu $229 TOP SIRLOIN ••• LI. U.S.D.A. CHOICE AMERICAN FRESH LAMB ........... CM01C1 NnMAMIMCAN U. W-1.0.A. OOC:l NIM~ LAlllll •· SJ7t LIM-SJ29 LAlll c.ts ... u . . LAlll ........... ll. --. U.U .A. CMC11C1 Hlltl ~ tM. UJi.t.J( OOC1 fllltl -.nc.t.N Wiil SllAl.LL .. SJH ....U SJ49 UUll CllPS •• Lt. UUll CllPS .. 11. !,I.I.a.A. OOCI N II* "*MC.AH ~ U.s.a.A. CMDICI ... Sit Alllll.:AM LAlllll LAlll L.. SJ 79 UUll 59c UUll CllPS.. ... .all ........ LI. . \ turkeys, this new ground product ass ures a weal.th of good eating at a budget price. TURKEY~. t (8 ounce) package crescent dinner rolls 11h tablespoons oil 1 to 1 V" pound ground tW'key meat 1 teaspoon salt l teaspoon basil, ~rumbled , I (6 ounce) can p1zia sauce 4 ounces sliced Mozarella or Jack chfese " 2 tablespoons g r a t e d Parmesan cheese Unroll and separate rolls. Arraoge together in lightly greased 1 l·inch pizza pan to form a crust; pinch seams together well. Brush with ¥.! tablespoon oil. Bake on lowest shelf of hot oven ( 425 degrees F.) 8 to 10 minutes, until edges brown lightly. Meanwhile, heat remaining tablespoon oil in skillet, add tur.key meat, and brown light· ly, stirring to br~ak up irito chunks. Season with salt and basil. When crust is about half ,,,. baked, remove from oven, and spread with 2 tablespoons pizza sauce. Top with turkey meat. and spoon on remaining sauce. C.Over with sliced t.ileese. ·and sprinkle with Parmesan. Return to hot oven, and bake about 20 minutes longer, \~· · 0 TURKEY until cheese is. melted, and,, _______ N~E_n~P_IZ_Z_A_P_O_SS_t_B_IL_l_TY_·_. _G_R_U_N_o ________ -+ edges well browned. Let stand · 3 or 4 minufes, then cut Into wedges to serve. Makes 4 to 6 servings. ------------- Off lOt. Off" ·. Good on any Knuct.en Fresh Salad: ,_ __ _, Potato, Macaroni, Cole Slaw, Carrot It Rat.in, 4-Be ... To the grocet: You are authorized to limited to one person and are not accept this coupon for 10¢ on the pur-transferable. Offer void where taxed, chase of any of the above-named prohibited , or otherwise restricted Knudsen Fresh Salads. This eoupan bY law. Customer must pay sales tax. wlll be redeemed for 10$ plus 3e Invoices showing purchase of suf- handling provided you and yOur cus-ficient stock to cover all coupons tom er have complied with the terms presented for payment must be shown of ·this offer. For redemption. mail to upon request. OFFE-R--€-~PJ Res KnudselfFood Proaucts,P.O. Box 1102. MARCH 3t, 1974. Glendale, Calif., 91209. Coupons (cash value 1/20 cent.) STORE COUPON STORE COUPON Iii•·••• -------- ' i ' I --· • .. ., ·1 .. ' ' • • .1 I l .. ' ' . . ..... ' .... . . . • :Jf DAI LY PJI OT WtdMSday, Auvust 29, 1'/IJ • • • • ' t . ,. " • . . ) l ' . ' ' • • • ' ' • . ' ' . • ' ' . . • I J : • • • I . . • • . . • . • . . . . • . • • • • t ~ ! I I i I i ' ' i i " ( I • ' • • • • t . I ' I ' I I ... 1 ALL SAFEWAYS WILL BE OPEN LABOR DAY MOllDAY-SEPT. 3RD . ••·d ... , Ml•'-' ., N9tth · 1 Ii l.Clf,hmonl .,.,. ·• E1cept lev•r Y Q.6 Polmdale. 10th 5,,.., .A Avenv• llOW ••• avallable al all IAFIWA Y Stores! USDA CHOICE USDA CHOICE BEEF Safeway Quality Bell At Safeway Low Prlcesl ••• as choice as always! * USDA Choice * Safeway ·waste * Unconditional Guarantee Grade Beet Free Trim" Of Satisfaction FRANKS PORK CHOPS Farmtr t John i Fully · Coo~ed f Shank .. Porfj911 ~ '(' lib End l.Oin C11t c lb. ~-/' -.,,· lb. .=. s 11• Loin End Pork Chops.=.. .. 98c Sliced Bacon -:;:.:.;~·.:i; ~'! s 12• c~~~T Spareribs :.~ .. 93c Smoked Hams .. :::i:.·· •. s1 1 ~ Lamb Chops ~~!:1:.~ .. s1 3• Ground Beef •.. :;~~:-...... ~'! s1 1• Lamb Rib Chops ·=~ .. s1 11 Regular Spareribs Buffalo Steak -=.::::=: :;:99$ Jimmy Dean sausage ::: \! spl Oscar Mayer Bologna .:~ :;: 79$ Fishsticks <r;·I!:· ·:.;84$ Armour Bacon ~=.: .. s1 3• Safeway Sliced Ham ~~·· :.-;:79$ Cooked Perch fillets :;::; ~9J$ WARM WEATHER TREATS PORK &BEANS TownHouse-:.Greot 30 .. 1.29c Picnic Tre:at! Can SCOTT VIVA NAPKINS '.';'.: SANGROLE s 4• Italian Swiss Colony Mag. 2 BARBECUE SAUCE Chris & Pitt's Buy Plontyl '""""" 41 c Bottle SAFEWAY BACK-TO SCHOOL BUYS Pudding Snacks Town House for lunch a •• Peanut Butter , .. :.::~~~:.,h ·- 4 '.::~·57c , Pock u .••. 59c Jo• Printed Lunch Bags , .. Ea.;~~~:."; ••.• :,k~;, 18c Safeway Corn Flakes Safeway Panty Hose ,,~;::~!;;~:;, ..... 34c Pk9. "•· 37$ •" Elmer's School Glue 0irl'.' 59$ . .~,~. 43c MIAT IPlll HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS ........ HAIR SPRAY \iii AQUA NET 56C 13..ounce Can ~!!~·~ Ga•9le ........... ~~· s1° Rubbing Alcohol '"'.::'°.=:'-•;:--19$ Herbal Essence Shampoo 'It· sp• Jergen's Baby Lotion '"'.::::"' ';:i'.· 99$ Dial Antiperspirant •• 1 ~::· s134 STOCK -UP ON THESEI FRUIT COCKTAIL Town Hovse Blended Fruits 1:;,L 29' Town House Applesauce ·~·:: 21 $ Corn T-11Hw-Wh.itlClft'11.t 1 ..... 23$ erCn-St~-Y-Ot.k• C.11 Green Giant Peas •;::: •;;: 26$ Green Beans "":::..::~· •::: 2J$ Niblets Corn ~=~.~ 't:: 24$ SAFEWAY LIQUOR BUYS! Ptktt lff..tM In Uc."""'4 s.t.w..,. VODKA OR GIN ·! Wlnner'1 Cup $2'' '"""''"' 5 $1 00 ,._ """'-..... c..o :--·. SO p,,..of Fifth G.Old Calhoun Bourbon,!';'.:;..~ •• $311 $ Se1orita Tequila =: .. ,:""" s3n @ael·Air Ye1et1ble1 .":::!.":::. ·~: 39t fi Bel·Air French Fries ·~7..c:;._, :..~ 15• Bel·air Hash Brow11 •;,; 23• Ore·ld1 Pot1toes O'BrlH ·:.;~45• r---····41111 FRESH BAKERY BUYS! IN OUR DAIRY CASE. .. fl BREAD . . l6-e1 39c • Skylark-Fronch loaf · Sq..,.,. "-h .. ~ s..- Hamburger Buns "'•· J5c or Nol Dtt a.s..Skylark. of e ·~~~~e~~~!~_ .. .'.:::-47t Shrimp Cocktail 'r."$ E: 35•. Cinumon. Rolls · .... t Lacerne P~rty Dips ~·-· ::-.., 37: _ w...,.. ••• .., -----·--··"" 8 0 Lucerne Chiffon Gelatin Salads '"" 59 Hi-Country Brlquets Pamper Diapers o;o:;!· "'•· 39c of 12 Beverages · 6 ~':!' $100 Depeoi•I Padre Lager Beer i::~ 6 1l.-:85c Potato Chips ,~z~~t.: .. 1 10....54c "'•· IUPmlOn . "A lllOW ITAR BRIAD ICE CREAM ...., . Bartl ett Pears ~. Watermelons ..::r.•,-;,., Cantaloupes !:;'~, Fresh Plums c.;;:::;- • BANANAS Fancy Quality Firm And Golden Bananas lb. c. LESS GRAPES U.S. No. 1 Tops For Your Fruit Bowl lb • c ,.J g$ Large Celery r.::!~~ _,.79$ -• 79$ Yellow Onions ':;!;:./ 3~43c 3,,.s100 Crisp Carrots .. ~~;.!,,, 3~43• 3""s100 Green Cabbage t.;it!'! •. 12$ Cucumbers ~= '"'..~29• Potatoes .~.!.~ 10~ 79• Honeydew Melons ::"..::.. -59• Potted Mums "i:~!::-;;-t;:· s222 Pee Chee Portfolios Sandwich Bags ·~~=­ Tbermos Snack Jar -· 78t e Piedmont Mayonnaise ~ 59$ Morehouse Mustard '~· 34' ____ ... ,,;,· ..... _,_C..,.l-'- • 1000 Bayside Dr., Newport Beach • 211 E. 17111 St. •. Costa Mesa • 24 .Monarch Bay Plaza, So. Laguna • 636 .N. Caast Hwy., Lapnlt Beacb e 801 E El Camino Real, San Clemente e Santa Ana Freeway at La Paz, Mission Yrejo e e Wilson & Fairview, Costa Mesa • \ ' A~ M~yfair, holiday. •• I, .CJJonele~ CJJeef Steak Sale ~cibrk Cut Steak IONILEll • OOURMIT'I OILIGHT CLettuce SOLID HEAD LARGE SIZE CMajfair "Best qjuys in Ptaduce GJJartlett L~!f! 4 Ln.J.00 cB.16\vn . Onions u.s. NO. 1 .JOLB Casselman PbmlLMAN 4 Ll•l.00 Crisp Gtt.9e'~R -TOPS OFF .JOLI. CAlllAGI loUd Htl<I ••• , .•••• , • lb .• 10 \ r~~,,~ILON ........ lb .OI RIC LIAF LITTUCI lll•d Otllglll. ' ' ' ' ........ 17 lolTON LETTUCI G1tdefi Fresh . , , .• , • , , ti. • 17 PINIAPPLI Haw1i11n •••••••••••• ••· .49 RADISHES • . Cri99, Tendtr' hnches .•. 11., 10 GREEN ONIONI · Morni"i Fresh BuneMs , , fl .• 10 CASABA MILQNI Thick M••t•d ••••••••• lb •• OI TENDER CILIRY. Atd81nd .•.•• ,.,.,, ,11 .• 18 PRllH MUIHROOMI -.... ,Y ........... 1n 1b .• 43 YALINCIA DRANOH httt, Juicy , .• , ... I lbs. 1.00 CUT MINT • ~UT CHIYll G!>Urmtt Oollgt;I , , ••• 2 bun •• 29 HOUSE PLANTI Ai1orltd Vtrl1ti11 2 f/4" Pot" , , .... ; 1 for 1.00 ORANGE JUICE fr9S1ic:tn1 -100't Pure 1/2 gal . Bottle • , , . , , • , 11 .• 14 ' Uncle Sam helps us prow that food coat leas at Mayfair last week than at 10 other top chains Eoe Jomparisons were made with the sa.tnti ten major super- markets in this area, last week , again . Tht 1uperm1rk1ts with ''total discowtt'', ''1pecials''1 andother low price cl1lm1 were again com- patld. And11ain, with this survey of Auauatl 7 IO 21, the overall food prices ended up lower at Mayfair than at all ten of these other top supermarket chains which we ·regularly survey. These comparisons were made with Uncle Sam 's list, the same long list of meat, produce and grocery items used by the U.S. Department ol Labor, Bureau of LabOr Statistics, every month, to mu1ure food prlcea. The results show you could have saved Crom $.01 to $4.42 on this list of 80 plus items . Think about It, can you &fiord to pau up saving on food at Mayfair? Oocum..,1at•Ol'I el 1"-pr•t• tO"'JI•""'" "'rvt y tho-"-••, wo\h 11~r• n•m••. " •~••111:11• 11 COlltY'"'t~ All1lr1 0.,1., Mty11.r Mtrli;tll, 1900 I. Otrl"I•, L•• Mttltl. C1l•I. IOOJl. CButter-Basted 'Rirkey,s ARMOUR GOLDIN STAR· 10 LB. TO 20 Lii. SIZE ·GRADE 'A' ALL AD'tlllltfltlD MIAT !TIMI AllS oii,11tto FOii &Ali AT CllLINQ ,lllCI 011 llLOW IUIJICT TO AYA ILAllLITY ,llbM OUfl lii""'L!llll. AD'tlSllTtS(Clllll l'lllCll llll l,,ICTIYI ~L '( '' THI ltf; ,lllC( CltLIHGS llEMIAIN tN E'FECT. SHOULD THI BEIF CEILINGS BE llEMOVEO, Wl MAY II llOJICIO TO CMAMGI lllT AtL l'lllCIS IN LINE WITH CM ANGii tN WHOLISALI COITI DUlllNG TMI PllltOb fMo\f TMll AD IS l'flCTIYt. ~ayfair "Best ~uys in t:Meat ~~.~/iced Pot:Jr, Cloi11. 1 ln II rVi4 CHOPS -IND CHOl'I-~ CENTERS MIXED • :7LB. 'R.irkey 'Roast WILSON 2 LI. 2 4n LIGHT AND DARK -BONELESS -UNIT • :7EA. ~Rl~lf!Q~AOE 'A' 1.09LB. ~ ~y ANO FLAYORPUL 0 le19LI. 'Halibut -~Ir ·166 FROZIN -dilfA'~aARHCUE t Lii. '~;Oii IAUSAGE PIRCH Pl~LITI No Mrl .. rotlon-I 1<;,.0n.1t.ictly FrHh., .lb.1.09 la •01 ................ . OL' VIRQINIA MIATI b:f IHOULOIR CHOPS Slletd • I 01. P~g , ur.o.r.1:.i~r.?.".' .... lb .• 91 ~1rrt.1f.:'1 .lilt~~· .... se ~OUNG DUCkLI-ARDEN CHUNK CHllllS radt 'A' At .. l•r L~rn or 1 19 1""'4' tnd Ttndtr •••••. lb, .91 M<illtroy Jt ChHH-.. lb. • ILICID IACON ARDIN PARTY DIPS Arrntiur • 11 oz. 8 ot. •Garlic, llue Chttlt, Q 1 ZI o..-Chill FrlllOh Onion, . roit Sftlaltt\' Flwor ••. ••· • '"°" • °"'"' . , . , ... , .... 41 DAILY PILOT 35 ALL MAYFAIR 24 HOIJR MAllklTI OPEN -·· • 24 HOURS LABOR DAY OTHER STORE HOVAS WILL IE PCSTlD RlTAIL FOOD PRJCI COMPARISONS BASED ON U.S. DEPT. OF LABOR , BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS ITEM LIST, IN MAYFAIR OISCOVNT ANO IN OTHER STORES, EFFECTIVE AUGUST 17 TO 21 Los An09l11 area No.of Unit $ Tot1I Saving• At Compttitor Items Mayf1ir Competitor ~1yf1ir Discount Ch1in A Discount Ch1in B Discount Ch1ln c Low-price Chain 0 Discount Ch1 in E Discount Ch•in F Non -discount Chaln G fllon -ditcount Ch1in H Non -discount Ch•ln I Non-discount Ct11ln J Cf'resh CF'ryers 75 74 77 73 76 81 65 72 82 13 47.73 50.06 2.:11 39.93 .-o.oo .07 42.88 .. 2.95 .27 39.81 41 .30 1.49 41.82 .. 2.63 1.01 47 .92 .. 9.02 1.10 37.14 40.36 a.22 39.01 42.70 .... 49.32 53.74 4.4.2 •t.I& ~J.17 a.II WHOLE BODY GRADE 'A' PILLSBURY WHOLE BODY, 81~ LI. 'Mixed 'Pryer Parts 3 HINOOUARTERS WITH BACK - 3 FRONTOUARTERS WITH BACK 3 WINGS, 2 GIBLETS AND NECKS INCLUDED 8IIJ.oked CJlani~ HOFFMAN BRANO -DRY CURE SHANK PORTION· I TO 1 LB. SIZE 'This week~ CJJest 'Buys in Gtai:etidS !'1.'Yo!t!!!'ooo '!!~!K .82 Libby 'Ftuit Cocktttai.!AN· .29 ..... ' . " CAfctVf~R~!~. ~NPo~PKG .• 54 ~aytresh ~v~9.tN .12 , WabiSco 8nak Crackers 49 AL~ VARIETIJI AiC. PKG. • %t~ CJJog ~°.Of/in oz.CAN 11 <:Afayfair AlumiflwT:f.9!l. .47 'Pbam Cupf,·70Z.C!JllS.39 'f«Jyal Occa~iOIJ ClH.dka' ··~1~ . -IO·PROO~ 'lf,.LF GALLON I i, . -, L l®ofl ' ~ .. i:, l.RWICK'S GI•• htro 9mooth-ROYAL OCCASION Rum-While fO-Prttf Helf 011. •........ 7. 11 or Gold· 80-Proof Fifth •.•• , J.4t WllT~ORT ILINDID Wh;lkoy-ANNIE GRllN ll'RINGl lWI••• A Ktntueky lllnd -ID-Proof l'tkh Cr11k, lerr'( F"91t end ... If Git. ................ 7.lt Cherry Froit H11f Gil. ..... , 1.1t '-- : Large 8licing . 'lbmatoes PIL~IT OF SOLE KRAFT SLICID CHllll u..-'·"·"'···M·;·ld·;·" .Fl···.·.· ...... 1b •.• 1 ... s.·-·A·m···.;· .... •.1.·1.1•.·.-3.1.b .••• ··.··.3 •.• 39-u ' 8od a· Pop ~ayfair Chateoal • '1Tyer 'Parts DRUMSTICKS OR THIGNI WITH P&LVIC ATTACHED· GRADE 'A' MAYFRESH .A•L FLAVORS RlGULAA OR LOW CALORIE 12 OZ. CAN 'Mayfresh IceC~am VANILLA, CHOCOLATE, NlOPOLITAN, CHOCOLATE CHIP 1/2 GA•. MAYFAIR 10 LS. Paper Plates 100 COUNT Prlctt Elfoctlva Thurod1y1 August 30, to September S, 1973 • · . Poocl ll1mps Welcome RS " ' '::' . . ~ .. . . ' . .... · .. ·.~.i.·.·,·.~.· . . . . . • • :J6 DAILY PILOT Wtdnrsday, August 29, 1973 W~nrsday, August 29, 1973 N , PILDT·ADVIORTISE~:,4 I I • .. V·i.nes " Offer " ' va ·rie ty ' Se<dless grapes b e n e 11 l chicken. So here's an easy-to- make skillet di.s1l that you might like to try. Fresh peaches are added to the grapes and so much the bet- ter. • .- There are twa kipds of seedless green gra~. One is called Pearli;tte and Is oo hand from late May through June.~ . These grapes are round and have a frosty-white color, and it's frortJ their shape and color that ~ get their name. The Other variety is called Thompeon and is available from June to October.1 These ligh't Breen grapes a r e medium to large and their flavor ii sweet and delicious. CIIlCKEN WITH ·GRt.PES • ·AND PEACHES l/, cUP. dry white wine I te~n )llJ~ · l,cuR'leedleio·ilreen grapes 2'larje frelb~cbes, peell'd and pitled'and halved 2 tablespoons flour, : I teaspoon salt 14 teaspooo parprika 1;4 t~pOon ginger 1 small broiler-fryer chicken (ab6ut 2~ pounds), cut up 2 ta tiles-'butler I tableipnQo 18!0il oil I clove 7garlic1 peeled '1!d ha lved Pour the wine into a bo.w1~ add ~_sq.gar ~ and1 stir to dissolve: add ~· • and peacher.and let .. . · , > •. On wru'Miei' tote the. noo/r,"Jilt, ., .ikll •. and ginger~. roll chiCMT 1rr .. flour m~ ..... . In a 12-inch skillet heat but· ter, oil and garlic: discard garlic. Add chicken~ skin side down ; fry slowly u n t i I skinside is )J'owned -about 15 minutes; turn so skin side is up. Cover skillet and .oontinue ~ frying unti;J bottom side is brown and continue 'frying un- til bottom side is brown and chicken is tender ~Wtother U minutes. Remove t tllCkeh.· ·· &ur marinade (n)m fruit · into skillet; with a wooden spoon oy~r Jow heat stir to get up Pripp~'si .,Return chicken, sklD side up, to skillet and add grapes and peaches ; simmer, covered, uptil fruit is hot. Makes 4~ings. Deffnition Punched Punch \Y8S iiltroduced in England1fto m f.¢ia. The word punch ia .ile~,.f'rom'thl! H1n- di w9rd .pai1Cli, meaning :tive. Tradltional)y,.· punch was inade with five·in~ients .. J• • -.. However, nowadays there Is no limit to the number .of in- gredien~.a punch may have. Here is'" a cool refreshing tea punch served with a pound cake CQvered with a delicious icing made with chocolate morsels . as. a special in- gredient. ' · QUICK PARTY PUNCH ' 6 cups water I cupaugar % cup. instant tea 2 6-ounee cans frozen orange juice, reconstituted ( 6 cups.) " 1 6-owice can frozen pineap- ple juice, reconstituted (3 · cupsf . .:-. · .. · Ii Cl!j>·~ juice . I 211-oon¥.j)oltle ~er ale, chill ... !P.i~ . In larg ~>llowl combine ' water, sugar llnd--,te~ stir un· til dissolved. Add reconstituted orange and pineapple juices. Stir in Jemoa juice. Before serving, add ginger al~. Serve in, a large bowl v.ith ice. If deaired, garnish at- tractively with halved k'esh strawberries, orange a n d lemon sJicts. Makes 40 lh-cup servings. Serve with chocolate frosted pound cake. SOFT CHOCOLATE FROSTING 1/3 cup milk .y, cup butter, 1 s-oo00e"Jiia.lke· (t ctip) ~chocolate m~·~ ~ 211 "'Pf •ii tea COil· fecuoners• qar In saucepan oombine mil~ and butter: bring jusl to a boll. Remove from beat; add chocolate morsels and stir un· ti! morsels an melted and m!xlure I! srnaolll. • Beat i n ~· • ~.lr"L1 fVW .. • -f • • ~ ***************lft .. WEJ!lt' ' , O'p:en LA~OR 'D~Y. MOllDAY, ;~. 3 9 A.M. TO 7 :·fl.I. 5858 Warner Ave ... Open•lO 1.m. to 7 p.m. OUR POLICY GUARANTEES THESE lOW 1111as TO u.,JN EFFECT AT ·lEAST 7 DAYS: WED .. AUG. 29 THlllJ rues .. SEPT ... ****************· 12·0Z. ·CANS SO PROOF $ . Bee£ is Back at Thri£timart ully (:«Joked ·· SHANK HAMS ·PORTION · ' ''TfNDER·IEE" FINE Q~ALITY BUTTPORTION ..... 11.14• ·HAM SLICES • • .. .. • 1.98 • ·w'ffOLE'HAM '...... 1.18• , ' .. B.lt F ''S .. ~BACK · ·"al 7;hrifti1narl · . Discount Su permarke ts •STEAKS FOil T:{'l ~; ll·B·Q . : •ROAST : FOR Tf/F:OVEN ; all th~ Thrifti~art 's Hif{h Siqndard ofi Quality & Variety Delly Treats! •uiar; continue .,.;Jing un1t1Jlll:l-----_:_-------------~~~~---:_,..':" __ _,_..,.._~"r;::-;-~;--~------~~ 1 ___ _.maoth .. Chill ,mru t b i c:) . ~ • . · .. ' . · , . 1 ~ =~ = cr~u:,:: 27Q1' Harbor BIVd~ Costa ' Mesa ~ 139ft· lrookhurst, Garden Gr,,1•e I :: .. 11'°uncopac1<agedpound 1308 W. Edinger, Santa Ana e 5858 Warner. Huntington Beach • 23811 El Toro, El Toro l • • " ' ' • ., l .Pears •' ' . ~ ~ ·Maten · .. . . ' eeds ~ ' . ~ ' • .. . ' ,,_,..are lovely things to do With fresh Bartlett pears. lip'• are.four auggestlons: F,.. a salad go back to a dllb that was popular years ...... .. . ........ '~. Ji'Olf Ire.II ~ and cut out f!I+ ,..ci. and llein structure. Artan8e pear ha1Ves, nat side ci,n.. on,aaJad greens; cover wOll.'lfftJi cream cheese soften-ed'1iltil· a UtUe cream. · . • ,,tqd the pear halves with wijhle small or halved lai'ge se+!lleu green grapes so that e~ pear looks like a bunch of · ~· . '.\'CJ!l'll need a three-Ounce ~e of cream cheese an~ two tablespoons of .cream fo loojr peat .halves. ' • Broll pears and serve lo~ !l\IDd"Y bninch with ham . ~ eggs. ' . Pare !lie pears w>d Cut ••cit lll·lhall, leqg\hwJI;;. remove 1~ and stem structure. Fill ~ ~vttles with honey, spl<a<l\nl a'llttle ·0ver the en-. tire ti>p awface. ''~kle · · 1Ji11tly ·wlth cinnamon. .Pl.ace !!' a .. shallow baking pan or oa foll .(with eclges ~ ., 'ind bii>ll '.about low' locht>4 '!'!n,I ~beat un-t•' -'IJiilt 'Ii ·Mi ·!brVugh and \ ~wtth·-c ' ......... .,.. 1 .,,,_,., ~ JlOW halves and I ieive "'1Ui VanllTa iCe cream ad~tcbo'i:ol8te ...... can this dessert Pears Hde0e. . .. "-" '!11 lnte-restlog..,. ~t for poultry or "I"'' . m_~ke up a balc!J of Ajlr!CO! Mustard Pears. 'nle rtolpe follows. .. , APBICOT MUSTARD '-" ,; PEARS '\ • '.(lrelh Ba!tlett petri· ''ii C\IP apricot jan\: I +2. tablespoons or m o r e , · • prepor<d mustanl \I cup water I J or 3 tablespoorii-lemon juice -I -Thin lemon 1lices ;Wuh pears; cut each in half / lef8tbwble.1 WJIA a melon ball • <:q\ltf of I '4" tiaspoon ' ~spoon, r-em o ve i *· Wltll a 'small sharp trilfe, fremove stem structure. In a large skillet mix ' 1c9lt!M1< the apriolt Jam. I prijJared mustard, water 1!1111 lmion juice. Add pear ....-Vet '· ~ - 'Cook gently, coveffi!. wltti · pun are tender. Add lemon ....... ilne hot or cbill!d as a ....,.. fllt•meat or poultry. 14kel':'a~-,~~-Jie a:·ll you UM. JDcdill cue, me swive~ blade ~· 'and ~ pore peon beliire hal . . . Cereals \ • ,fontinue ' . . :j1ie !Jpportance ol a 'ood ~· i• often 1-ted, bUl"c-:::.c.:,o1 u I~ \hii .,.,. ··1 gOQll, aiMce. I ljlood sugar levels fall r- ing -the night and can cal>e fallgue H DOI replenished. I A gOod breakfast gives us qui:k energy. to start the day ali( - eoitileo--us tO stay mentally alert, . • -) '1'lie tradlttooal Amerlean bacon and egg breakfast Is nol necessarily the bes( for you. Doctors .are recUnmend 1hal eve\-yone, regardless of age, loWff · their 'Intake of food! rich tn. cholesterol and saturated fatj bitCOn and eggs • ai:e high on uit111St. · ' A modillfd.lat diet is Im-1 .,..,...t ·forll can help :iou to mtuce the ·risk of heart -In 1--Jlle.. .• ~ 'lbere are ·rnony tasty and rotrllious tnlldut !Oods that don't includi high-cholesterol eggs. For example, High Pro Cereal, a ble!ld of sweetened cooUd rice and pol cheese, Is a. "'"t chance-<>f-pace mom· Inc treat aemd' With ri1.•pber-ry.pmerves and skim milk. Round .out :iour· breakfast ......-with fresh melon "" Miii juice, wll01e wheat tout andciolfee. ' ' mGB P1IO CEREAL I> cup upcooked rice J ~-com mat'll&rlne 1 'cup pet Cheele v.cup ..... Rupberr)I _.. .. ~m or ftUed milk Qiok rice according to pectqe dlreclloos eSC<Pt use 2 tableopooi1t marprtne. SU• ln cheese and sugar. Heal ilnugb.- Serve In 4 portlons to-· 'Ifill! a spoonful of preserv• and ')lOllf on milk to taste. • • 42.COllrlt Jor' · STRl·DU 3 MEDICATED>P~S 6 c 75-Coufrt ~ ttc .-w~~~~t':t~ -·~ f>6vb1e di1<ou<1" (Jr• l •tr• 1ovl1191 In oddhlon to __.,.IJ',llet 1ow-~·prQ1o T""1 -mod.·pcn- 1lbM hr ltOl'IPO""'f purtho1• O"OWOl'ttl ''°"' the fl0'/llf~M'"1 !hi' •all'O ~ pot~ on IO ~ • • flOm<fOOOS CAR.NATO<!. 7.oz. a•_c ' , CDOIO & PEEW·SJllM' vµ_ -rS' w ... ..,;,. 16-0L 66:... .~ ~EMLTt 1edntsday~ August 29, 1973 ' • RED Rl?E • WHOLE' . WATERMELON: .. qa:-. J-.• CASABA MELONS~-. ~ . ' ~· . ' . . . c 49~A. tE PR1cEs':°EFi=ECT1VE ~·' ' • ,. • -• • I . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . . . ' . . . . . ., .. ~-~-.~ ..... WtdntsdlJ, Au9utt 2', 1973 Wtdntsday, August iq, 1973 PILOT-ADVERTISER 9 , U 'OAJLY PILOT • The beef shorta1re is over, and so ts havi~g to go someplace el1e and paying higher prices for lower quality beef. Now Ralphs has a big supply of beef, so yoli'll find a wide selection of cuts and the good quality you expect. As always, 'We gUarantee your satisfaction or your money back. Ootnjj to Ralphs for beef and everything you need to make the last big weekend of summer really super • ,, MEAT DEPARTMENT ----===::::::::::=------------------. ----------------------------. R•lphl !XCIUllfl Fresh fryers Cbllck ,Sta a ks .. ' . U.S.D.A. Grade A Southern 2-2Y2 lb. avg. Beef--Blade Cut lltf lllouk111 Cut lb .• lb •• lb..98 Family Steaks 111.1.08 r:irc1c;d"R~ lb.1.48 Bfff Loin Cut Braising Strips Ralphs lb1.59 n..1.55 n..1.33 er Fresh A •PICIAL COMBINATION OP Q~OUNO BEEP AND HYDROLIZED PJIOTllN CONC!NTRATE. • Blade Cut lb .• lb .• Pork Chops ,, D1y1Pr11h1r-Whol13 lb. 1vg.. 111..83 llrloln Ind Cut California Fryers Fresh Pork Roasts ,;ihHe'°nU%fk~ySugo ... 81 t:i':;;bhShOUkser Chops Sirloin Cut lb .• 99 Dov1r-l'r91h Fresh Pork Chops Sole Flllell Did Fashioned Ice Cream . ~.~=~ • HIC Fruit Drinks 46 o'z. can ,. 11Guthw11h I: G1rtl• . 14 or. .89 1M1ld Ullertne bottle Lemonade .. 1lpll1 Owri lrtnd-FW'ttlt 16 QI. .n Pto11n Conoentt111 Balllm Shampoo bottle Ha\Wlllrl Punch V.1ttkt1-lnttn1I•• Cir• .... .82 wr;•Mllie Hind Lotion bottle Rtl)'l1r-Htrd To Hold-Super 18 oz. 1 7 4 V 5 Hair Spray ••• , .,.., ... 1tort•• Pr.pmtlon H •Stl1un Blue i.::.; 1.39 •Skin Clrt Dendruff Shampoo Propa P.H. Lotion Ant.l•Pf,.,1r1nt ' .... 71 R1lph1-llf'll 111:1 Hour After Hour . Olft I Frozen Lemonade Pltkl~ Mtrltd ,ff lptO .. I "' :it. .•• 1unkl1t-Pro1en EVERYDAY lfll t Side Shampoo Orange Juice INf'nllovm l\IN. 55 11n111r•-'""" '''' ,, Ctl1hmere Bouquet C•ll • Cut Corn LOW PRICES l lnu1 M11t111oh• fll l!l•f l•oL 74 r""''"" Slna·Off Tablets Piii· • oa Cubie •Mouthw11h I G1rgre ::~1.11 tv""ift''""'-Capac;ol • ae I or • .14 ••• . ... .21 ••• 11 oz. .35 ••• 12cL 1 aa pkg. • . .... 1.18 boltlo ,. ... 23 ctn • •.:; .24 10 ... 21 Piii· • '" 1 ""· 23 b19 •• .... 18 pkg, I Htln1-A11orttd PltYDl'I Bar1>e4ue 9aLIOI 'r••ll '9ct · Mixed~ '•PP•r~I p;a.•:• John'& . Chun lltln1-l•1t or Chlchn Chow Mein V.ft Dt K1mp'1-l'rott" Fried Halibut G1bh1rdt'•-P1m1ut Hot Dog Sauce Sm11ok1t1...:A110Mtl l'liftf'S I Ice Cri1m Ttlpplng1 1un1fttn1 OMIHt Vanllla Walare Chlelltft Of 'fht i 11 Light OhUllk 1\ln1 ChlNlftler Hon ,,, lnetant Miik -.. ' 11 or. .ae .. hi • 10 oL .19 I pk9, 1$01. .85 pk .. , .... .89 pk9. ' .96 ' .... Jlig, 1011 •• 23 0111 • ,. ... 33 ""'' . 11 "" 42 ""· . .~ ..... 3 ttn ... 1 ::: 1.11 n...87 111.1.68 lb1.48 Prlc11 elf•ottvtj Aug. 30 through Sept. I A61olutely No Sales to Dealers or Restaurants of any kind. • • The Su,,... market I r..z:: i RALPHS STORES ARE LOCATED AT: 380 E. 17th ST., CDlfl MW1 ID1 ADAMS ILVD.1 HUN~INITDN BEACH; 15471 S. BROOKHURST, WESTMl~TER; I.ACUNA HILLS, 24167 PASEO OE VALENCIA 1728117tll S1 ., TUSTIN 401 N. LOAltA, ANAHEIM STORE HOURS: 9-10 DAl~Y. g.p . . . J PILOT-AOVERTISER WMnesday, August iq, 1973 Wtdne~, Auvust 29, 1973 DAILY PILOT 3 Free Booklet "110 Tips To 1iim Your Meat Expenses" By Martha Randall, Ralphs Home Economist Available Now at All Ralphs Hospitality Centers All Ralphs will be closed on Labor Day, Monday, September 3 DELICATESSEN DEPARTMENT AIMtat Ralphs Wieners 120L .77 fllelpha-Aged I Monlh1 Sharp Cheddar Cheese 1~ 1.21 Lake To Like Longhorn or Monterey Jack Cheese '01. .89 Freeh Dally-12 Pack ~~M~-!?.~~85 pkg. .17 .37 Ralphs Potato Salad ,, OL Wll1on'1 Smoked Ham Sausage lb. 1.89 Fleltchm1nn'1 2 T\lb 45 Diet Soft Margarine , 1b. • ...,ry Suger or 67 Chocolate Chip Cookies .1:. • Onion-a.con-GuUc or Clim Rods Dip IOL .49 Chlffon-1 Tub Soft Margarine 1 lb. .45. Bat Foods Mayonnaise :. • eoaort.x-A1tofled Coton ..... .11 Paper Napkins .... Folfer'a-l1rg1 Slz.1 100L 1.39 Instant Coffee I•• Yvb1n-All Orinda '.! 2.89 Ground Coffee Llpton't-LlirJi:l•e 24 oz. .89 Ice Tea . I" • 12 Ounce D9Pffh lottl• ··~ .BB Hires Root Beer c1rton Gtttl FOf Hot D911 ·:. .15 Morehouse Mustard .......... ·~~ .87 Charcoal Brlquet1 1\lbtn-All Grinch !.":; 1.06 Ground Coffee Ant a Jloacft k...,. 11~ O.t. 87 Raid Insect Spray "" • Coflwptrel l tff 1 Ralph• Bleach .J:; .37 BAKERY DEPARTMENT 1R1lph1-H1mburg1r or Hot Dog Buns pkg. • otl Ralphs-Cherry Wheel Coffee Cakes A1lpha-Homem1d1 GaodnHa Apple Pies R1lpfll-Dollclou• Lemon Tea cakes .33 Heh .66 .:; .79 HCh .69 DAIRY DEPARTMENT Puneh-Orape-ora..,.-Llmoft Ralphs 55 Fruit Drinks g•lfo• • Fresh and Pure 79 Ralphs Orange Juice 111 ,.non • Gr11t For Dlpa , 53 Ralphs Sour Cream pint • Wolch'I ctimod Grape Juice Drink l>g•L .98 GlantSlza • Tide Detergent Atco.-H••YJ Du tr "._ .45 Aluminum Foil ... Ol1d-Pla1tlc 10 CL .27 Sandwich Bags pkg. Ly~-Uquld 15 OL .39 Deodorant Cleaner bottl• KIHM•-AttOr1ed Colors 200 ct. .29 Facial Tissues .... Favor-Spray ..... 1.21 Furniture Wax con N1bltc0-Prtml1Hn ":, A1 Saltlne Crackers ' D .. Mol'll9 .... 10 Tomato Sauce .... Sl«r8 ,,,,._ Deodoftltt .... 17 Bar Soap .... Mtllm-LlltteSIM 'j:; . 2.25 Freeze Dried Coif•• •lomt Undt -ltoWll Gravy Qulk •••.• 19 •Asterisked items not avallable ~-§"§"~·-•"'• ... ... •&.· ...... -.. .... In the following stores: -..... ,,., .......... . Met1s:c1 .. tM1 N.Weltlffl vlill1 SuBf Low prices I LIQUOR DEPARTMENT PRODUCE DEPARTMENT Laknhlre Gin or Large Vine Ripened Tomatoes Sandra Vodka Save.30 8.99 y, go! • Old Gt.nwood-1 Veer Oki sm,ight Bourbon -Don Juan-Save .20 Imported Rum filth 3.79 filth 3.39 U.S. No.1 Russet Potatoes 101b. 86 cello big 1 New Crop Callfornla . 28 Golden Delicious Apples lb •• CaH of 24-12 Ounce Cans Amber Brau Beer full Cl11 3.39 Mlld,&wfft Brown Onions lb. ~10 .10 .10 Long, Green HOUSEHOLD VALUES Cucumbers Hell C11t lron'710'x10• Freah, Crisp Hlbadd 2 Barbe• : .. h " .99 Bell Peppers - each .88 lnsulated-30 Quart,Slze Foam Ice Chests ,. Potted Mums Hch2.$ -.111 · .. p1lr .fJ7 Speclal S.Je-On• Sbe Fresh Cut Pompons PantyHose CX 126-20 Expo1ur11 1.47 Kodacolor Film II Ch 490Z. • pkg. - • Ralllhl canned Pop 12oz. • Cln , 01l1ttn DHtM't9 0oL .21 Jello .... Heinz-Genuine 48 Ol. .79 Dill Pickles bottle Chun Klng -AttortM 12 ct. .89 Egg Rolls .... Whit. King 'D' 49 Ol. .58 Detergent .... * M1n'1 Hair Or11tln1 4\1.t Groom And Clean ,.':.',; .88 D-4 Monie Tomato Catsup CNolOM Of TI11 l11 Light Chunk Tuna l\lban-Urge 1111 Instant Coffee ktftttforcf's Charcoal Brlquets Houtt A Gtrdtn 9ug KINtr Raid Insect Spray 140L 23 ...... ...... 62 C:ll'I • •••. 1 44 Jar • 't~; 1.69 .. ~ ... 119 ctn • U.~1'ttllo. "'•I011alW, LM ......_a)O S. W•litrJI Ue Aftt ...... 51S W. )f(I Su"t LM ~t .. 12051 WK1~lr1 ~ ht ..... 11M lo. v. ....... 1 ... ..tr .,_W1 WMllllrt ''"'· EVERYDAY LOW PRICES .,._,.....,....._ml"'-""M C .............. ~ .... ._27ttt.e.Mt .... A-.,_....,.,1Jl21M ............ a..tlll .. ttrietn,.....,....... Mu:1k41o;U....._ttftL""- ~~l~1Q&&&&Mht1(1~~ ~ ~ Ralphs s .... :zow,.._ ~ ~ Charcoal 49 ~ ~ i ~ Brlquets .o, .... , • ~ ~ , Only Ont coupon P9t Cuttotn•r ~ Coupon Ooocl Aug. 30 ~ru ..,._ I ~VA~', RALPHS STORES ARE LOCATED AT: 380 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA; 9901 ADAMS BLVD., HUNTINGTON BEACH; 15471 S. BROOKHURST, WESTMINSTER; 1.AGUNA HILLS, 24167 PASEO DE VALENCIA 1726117tll SI., TUSTIN 401 N. LOARA, ANAHEIM STORE HOURS: 9· 10 DAILY. 9-9 • ' Ski rn ny Dipping Okay· :· I . . . . • . . --VA lUABlE (J U PON PRUF I SPRAY STARCH I I I 19, IS OZ. AEROSOL CAN . ' .... .-(' ' VAlUAoU COUPO~I SPRINGFIELD SODA POP 12 O~ CANS 12/51 ------AJAX WINDOW CLEANER 19, I fl. OZ. . SPRAT IOTILI . I . I I I AJAX CLEANSER 2/35' llG 21 OZ. CAN I I I I . \\Then Atneric~n ~SIC~9 ,, With 1h;1 co11po11, 110 minim11m p11rchttt requi1t d !.lmit I With thit coupon, 110 minim1,1m purch•t• rtq1,1ir•d. limit I With !hit co11pon, no minimum purcht1t r•quir•d. Limit I With th i1 coupon, no min imum purcht1• rtqulr•d. Limit I first Started servuig dips Wlth I ptr coupon -on• coupon ptr cu1tomtr. Void tfltr 12 ctnt 111•1 coupon--on• coupon p•r cuilomtr. Void I bottl1 ptr coupon -one cowpon p•r c111to"'tr. Vold 1.bottlt P•t couton-Gn• coupon p•r cu1lomtr. Vold •ft•r before-dinner drinks, the dips 1 Sui.dty, Stpt. 1, 1971 , 1 •fttr 5undty, Stpf. 2, 1911. 1 •ft•r Sund•y, Stpt. 2. 1971 . • Sund•v, Stpf. I, 1973 . .1 usu.ally had ~tato chips as 183341 GOOD ONLY AT IAIGAIN IASKn 500D Of4LY AT IAIGAIN IASKfT f7J06J •OOD ONLY AT IAt•AtN Lt.Wit I f7l04l aoOD ONLY AT IAR•AIN IASKIT {· I the1raccompan1ment. ..., ____ fi ________ -~----______ -"~-_ _ ___ ---· But for some yeal'l! now a .. 1111\P I r•" II I good many.party-givers in this - - -->IllLl4lllllWl\1 ---JJq:t 'lllil!jl-- - - - -17!Jlfl!l!11p11U:.Iliji -1--~ ,.. - - country .have foUowed French ' AJAX LIQUID I I j QUIP I and Italian cutsme and served SILK . u.s. No: t IUHm 1 . the dips with a selection or I DETERGENT I I I ra~ ··~~~n~5 when raw NAPKINS POTATOES I PUDDINGS vegetables are served this way I 49" I I 1 o LI 89" • CHOCOU.TI , 4 I$, I they're called Crudites. .. 3 I 25' CILLO .. I • VANILLA For an Italian-style dip for I I to COUNT I IAG • 1um1SCOTCH the vegetables here's an idea FULL 9UART from the executive chef of the I Witli thi• coupon, no minimum purch•1• rtquirtd. limit 1 With thi1 coupon, no minimum purch•t• ttqulrtd. Limit I With thi 1 coupon, no minimum purch11• rtquirtd. Lim it I With thi, coupon, no minimum p111ch 11• requlrtd. Limit I Waldorf-Astoria hotel in New I qt. per coupon"-one co .. pon ptr cu1to"'''· Void tfltr 3 per coupon -on• coupon per cu1tomtr. Void tfl•r I p•r co11pon -on• coupon P•• c111lomtr. Void tfter 4 p•r coupon -on• coupon p•r cutlomtr. Void t fltr York City. ~ Sund<1v, Sept. 2, 19 73. Sunday, Sept. 2, 1913 . I S11ndty, Stpt. 2, 1971. 1 Su11d•v, Sept. 2, 1971. I RAW VEGETABLES WITH I GOOD ON LY AT IARGAIN IAS!lET I GOOD ONLY AT IARGAIN IASKfT GOOD ONLY AT IAIGAIN IASkfT GOOD ONLY AT IAIGAIN IASKET ·---------------------------------------TONl!IA TO DIP t can (7 ounces) tuna pack· ed in olive oil 4 anchovy fillets I Yr teaspoons capers ~ teaspoon grated lemon rind t tablespoon lemon juice ~ cup real mayonnaise Raw vegetables, see note below Fiake the undrained tuna. 1.fasb the anchovies. Mix tuna, anchovies, csptrs, lemon rind, lemon juice ._... mayonnaise. Cover and chill. (For a smoother consistency, blend these ingred ients in the elec· tric blender ~.Wltil smooth.) Makes J 'r'• ·cups dip. Note: ~ the raw vegetables di the dip ;i, guests may dunk them in it. For the vegetables choose among these;tsca llion s, radishes, cherry tomatoes, mushrooms, cucumber , celery, knob celery, wtiite turnip, carrot. cauliflower. The scallions, radishes and cherry tomatoes are of course served whole. The mushrooms may be sliced if large or left whole U small. The cucumber may be sliced or cut into strips. Celery, knob celery, white tumip, and cariot may be cut into sticks. , Cauliflower s h o u I d separated into flowerlets . • Germ Spread Boost Breads It's a good idea to add wheat germ to loaves of white bread because th e wheat ge rm boosts nutrition and gives the bread a nutty flavor. Adding honey, as the recipe directs, furnishes sweet navor. By the way, after you open a jar of toUted wheat germ (,Yhether ij's the 12· or the 20- ounce s~), keep it tightly covered in the retriger~tor. HONEY WHEAT GERM BREAD 1 package active dry yeast tAt cup warm water (105 to 115degrees) t 'k cups mlli, scalded V4 CUp honey ' 2 tablespoons butter 2 tablespoons salt 1 egg 41~ cups (about) nour 1 cup toasted wheat genn In a small mtlirlg bowl dissol\'e yeast in water. Into a large rnlxll!i bowl turn the scalded milk: honey, butter and salt; stir untU but- ter melts, then cool to lukewarm. Add yeast. egg and 2 cups flour, beating until smooth ; stir in '>''heat germ. Add enough more of the !lour to make a stiff dough. (It will be sticky.) Tum out Ofl lightly floured surface. Knead until smooth and elastic -10 minutes. Place in a greased boYl'I, turning to grease top surface. Cover with a damp to wel and let rise in a warm place until doubled -alx>ut I OOur and IS minlltes. Punch down. Shape into 2 loaves. Place in greased loaf pons (each 811 by 4 II by 3 inches). Cover and let rise ln a warm place until doubled -about 45 minutes. Bal<e In a preheated 315- degree oven aliout 40 minutes. Tum out IOlvea on wtre rack -- and cool. Makes t loaveo. RC COLA or LIPTON ICED TEA IT'S FUN TO SHOP AND SAVE AT BARGAIN BASKET THE FUN STORE • 12 OZ. CANS ._ _____ M_i_sc_E_L_L_A_N_Eo_u_s ___ __.I I HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS I l.__ ____ P_A_P_ER-IT_E_MS ____ _ FRESH PRODUCE RED RIPE SALAD SIZE TOMATOES 15~ LAURA· SCUDDER POTATO CHIPS Twin Pak -Rog. 7Sc ALPEN MIXED CEREAL 24 oz. Bo• MOTHERS COOKlfil All 55c V.arletles MR. JUMBO DEGORATED '· 59' $1.29 49¢ PAPER TOWELS BIG ROLLS 4 ROLLS $1 ;A~~~;E:l l;~ I 1 LIQUOR 0 ROUl~LOF VODKA 31Y: fl Full Fifth ,, BARGAIN BASKET VODKA RED RIPE 2 Lb. Full Quart MAC ANGUS SCOTCH Fifth H11IMS Of MiflollS 41/11; Lb. ONIONS MILD SPANISH 3 L 25~ B s GREEN BEANS FRESH K~NTUCKY LA PAZ MARGARITA MIX Full Qu•rt BALLANTINE BEER 12 o:r:. C.an1 GRADE "AA" EGGS DOZEN $3.29 $4.29 $3.79 79c 6/$1.09 LARGE FRESH CREST TOOTHPASTE -7 •1. Tube Rttular $1.Dt •t Som• Stor• GLIEM TOOTHPASTE -3 •L Tuite Rttul•r 6tc •t Som• Stotff SPRINGFIELD HAii SPRAY ll •z. A•rOIOI C:.n SECRET ANTl·PIRSPIRANT S oz. Aerosol C•n He.ad and Sh.uldws Lotion S.m,oo 11 fl. 01. btl. Rtg. $2.45 et tome 1tor• 79J 47c 3/$1 59¢ $1.59 PR~LL SHAMPOO -lmlM'l•I Sin - 16 fl . OL btl. Rtg. $2.15 at .ome storft 99¢ PAii C•nc9ntrate SHAMPOO lm,.,111 Sl1e 99 .. 1 OL Tube R ... $2.1 s It Mm• storn ... STYLE HAIR SPRAY 13 OL Aerosol Can 59c Carnation IOX Of' 6 ENVELOPES INSTANT BREAKFAST •. FROZEN FOODS ,..RICH'S COFFEE RICH 16 OL C.rttm 19J !':!.'~::IELD ORANGE JUICI 5 /$, .oo MORTON MEAT Pllr$ Chicken, lfff, Turkey 5/$1.00 la19to. FOOD STORAGE IAGS 3/$1 00 loaof25 • ORCHID PAPIR TOWELi Big Roll 3/$1.00 ZEE TOILET TISSUE 4 koll P•k SOAPS & CLEANERS ' THRILL LIQUID DETERGENT 22 fl. OL Sia:• 39' 49e IOLO DETERGENT -Femlly 111• IOlb.lln. $2.59 aOLO DETERGENT Giant Stu 83t CASCADE -For AutOtMtfc OlthwalMn 59 .. Gl•"t Sire • PALMOLIVE IAR SOAP - Pink or Gr..., l•th Size ... IUllLOVI IUllLE IATH 1 lb. bo• ORCHID TABU NAPKINS JUMBO PACKAGE OF 100 NAPKINS 25' 23.fb. V•n De Kamp CHICKEN ENCHILADA DINNER 39J BARGAIN BASKET BETIER BEEF USDA CHOICE, & MANNINGS BEEF, EASTERN PORK, GRADE A POULTRY, BAR M HAMS & BULK LUNCHEON MEATS FRESH SLICED BEEF LIVER ............................. . ' ARMOURS CAMPFIRE WIENERS 1 ~~;. BONELESS SIRLOIN TIP ROAST ' ................................ TENDER BEEF SHORT Rl1BS . .............. . BAR M IULK STYLE WIENERS ........................ . c lb c .. BONEUSS TOP SIRLOIN STEAKS BONELESS SIRLOIN TIP STEAKS T·BONE $ $ STEAK . .......... •' ................... . PORTERHOUSE STEAK . .... ' ... ' .... ' ................ . TENDER RIB STEAK ................................ 39 LB. 89 LB. BEVERAGES DR. PEPPER -Full Qu•rt Plus Botti• Dapollt DADS -Full Quart Plus Botti• 0.,0.lt VERNOR$ -Full Quart Plus Bottle D•posit RC COLA -16 •i. loHIH Plus lottle 0.,0.lt 5/$100 5/$1.00 5/$1.00 ,....--~---------------Prices -ectlvei Thunclay · thru Sunday August 30, 31 Sept 1, 2 Prlcn sullied to -" .. "-1. WI GLADI. Y ACCIP'I • U.S.D.A. FOOD COUl!ONS ''- L__:i•::...the:::..!'~M~"'!!i!!m1!11 , __ R_O_E_LA_.ss_SB_T_EF_·_aR-1s-·K_E·r_ .. _ .• _ .. _._ •. _ .. _ .. _ .• _ .. _._ .. __ s_1_~_! __ R_v_iN_B _RE_R_D_vO_A_S_T_._._ •. _ .. _ .. _ .. _ .. _._ .. _ .. _ •. .;.__$_l_1_L!_._:.~~ i . I 19111 and Place~ 710 w. Cha.., Wednrsda,, August 29, 1973 DAILY PILOT •4J. .Galori.es ' . Ski·mmed ' ' •• THE Sl ·IM ·i GOURMET -- By BARBARA ·GIBBONS , t ~k~ In a preheated 45Q. minules at 325, W>W .fllllQc is l (lll<>unce) bor frozen ""'" . nln~lnch slraigh~iided cake tl)e tomato sauce and ·fork· , Fl"llch Tuna Quiche! Italian ilemlngree oven for 7 orh 8 completely jet, chtnl or spinach, thawed pan and spreod evenly with " blend lightly. Pou• over Sevves . (OW' at 292 calories each. f. "Pim RustlcaY?. WhO'd: tx-utes, only until llg Uy Slice into pie wedges to 1 !"teaspoon oregano or fingertip:. over all Inner spinach then top with re-C.&Uing all cheese c 8 k e ,,.,,. to ·~ , ... , calorll1'c brownetl. ' serve. Makes lour tn a,. n I'-lian 1easonings surfaces, cutting to flt., , malnlng' tomato sauce Am . ' I .,... .. ~ ~ lfW• ·R,emove from oven and 'I te•S'J)O!Xl garlic salt Quick brute in a prehea\ed · · lovers. .eneas most ux-· clas11ca-..ln I ~ column sprtad drained, tuna over the course servings at 262 calories Pinch ol pepper .or red pep-450-degree oven for 7 to 8 Return to the ~ven and bake urloua !Jes~. decalorized ! for diet'ers? . bottom. Spfink)e on parsley, each. per n1inutes, until lightly browned. .at 4~ for 10 mtnutes. Lower For recipes and diet ilps send ' Never fear, om:, S l 1 m onion and Worcestershire. TUNA PIZZA RUSfICA 3 eggs , Remove Crom oven and ttie .~eat to ~ ~d bake an a stamped, self-addressed Gourmet · v:erslon.s are less Beat eggs, milk and salt , 1 cup plain tomato sauce • spread tuna over bottom. Top a<id1t1onal.40 ~lites. Sprinkle envelope and 25 cents to SLIM l' than 300 calories a serving, together and pour on. (Italian Tuna Pie} 3 sliC'5 {3-ounces) part-skim with well-drained thawed ~ue-~llrface with pt:z~ cheese dur· GOURMET CHEESECAKE ;, despite their rich BPd fat· -Return to oven and bake for 4 refrigerator crescent rolls mozzarella (pizza cheese), chini or spinach. Sprinkle wtth 1ng tbe last IS JTUJlutes ol bak-RECIPES, in care o( the Daily ., tenin&: taste! 1() minutes at 450. Lower heat 1 (7-ounce) water-packed shredded · seasonings. lng. Pfiot, 50 West Shore TraU, I Even more lml)Ortant, both and bake an additional 20 tuna Unroll crescent rolls in a Combine the eggs with hall _.::Cu.::t.::in.::e:::ig::.ht_w.::e.::dg::.:•.::• .::to.::s•_rv_e_. _s::_part_•:..• N_e_w_J_erse_:y_rn_a_n_. ----------dishes are ootrtU01>rlcb and : lnelpeMivo. 'l'hlt'a because LAB I R 111 •they're made with protein-· powered skim milk ,an<l eggs, 1 ' l plus bargaini)l'ice« caiinell t~ is a good buy in mole " . ' ••• . ;. MOST VONS STORES WILL llE CLOSED LABOR DAY Mf)NDA~ Sl!PTl!lll91! c;-wi:,::.i.:.~ l than irlce: ~· A aeven"unoe can oU.-1 6& I gramo ol protein (meat vilue) _ 1 1 .. only 210 calories. An equal amount of rib 1'08!t, oo the other hand, has only 25 grams of protein and costs you a 1 wh>pplng fJtl calories! 1 ot Course, we're speaking of I no-fawdded tW>a: caMed In water instead. of oil. Oil-pack· ~ed tuna Is twice as faltenlng (but still lower in calories ~·rib.ms!!) t> BOd} ~ihepe recipes ~ a ~~·lf?lll the usual American tuna pie recipes - fattening cream sauce under a heavy"lid of pastry, • A quiche is a French topless pie that's usually fUled with a ,.vory egg mixture and bits of mea~ fish, ,cheese -in this case, tuna. . -'or course, everyone knows what pizza Is, bul "Pizza Ru.ltica" ls far more .in- teretting -"peasant pizza+'' a deepdish tomato pie that usually Includes more than cheese and tomatoes. Today's recipe adds tuna and v~getable, a complete meal that needs lllile more than a ~lad aide dish. QUltX TUN~ QUICHE (Freoch Tua Pie) it refrigerator crescent rolls l (7..-) can water-packed tuna 11> 18blespooo dried panley l tablespoon dried onion flakes . II> lab!-W0<cester- sbire sauce 4 eggs 11> C1111S sltim mllk I teaspoon salt Um>ll crescent rolls in an eigh~inch DOOSllck cake pan. Wlth your lingertipe, spread dcltlb evenly over the bottom an<l up the sides ol the pan , cutllng to 11~ so lhal all inner swfaces are oovered With a thin cnisL Marinade Prepared The marinade mey ii. used u a salad dressing. MAJllNATED ARTICHOKES I package (10 OllDCeS) frozen artie1!9kes , v. cUp 'lllller 5 ti~ cider vinegar I> teupoon sall I> cup com oil v. le ... dt1ed thyme, '4 tetapoon dried oregano '4 teaspoon crushed red pep- ' per Olok artichokes according to pacbge dlrectlons using the water, 1 •tablespoon of the vinegar and the "'II; drain and cool. Mix together com oil, re- maining I tablespoons vinegar, thyme, oregano and pepper; pour over artichokes and marinate several hourr-or ovenri&ht turning occasionally. Makes 1 pint. W•'" ...... " ...... """' ·-•' ........ , ... ,tt-..... 1~ T., ...... MMtt··~· M_. COAST SUPER MARKET -Done. by ·Dunn , Pat DuM 11eta. thln111 done, Throw her your chlllenae and aee how ah< han•lel It ln her ••At Your Service" eol· 11111, now apptartna ev~ ~;:ere~p~- '-~~~~~~-~· YONSIAWE MEATS FLAVORF.UL . RIBSTEAKS ~'llllAT U. .5 u.Z.45 ........ Slrllll Ti, 1111'111 Flmllf 11110 Cl!NTERCUT CHUCK STEAKS .-.arto~ ~ . 0 ... 11...,111111 11111• -· llllllllal 11111111 lllnNlr Cllll = Cnallklllell = ..... ......... ..,._ .,. ..... u.1.59 u.1.1111 u.1.69 LL1.15 LLl.29' """lll•lllCb Fl'lllI """ .... Cll U, Fnlll Fryn =u..85 FARMER JOHN 1 SAUSAGE RO\.L '•' ~11111'T t-LL ' a.1111111'111111 tm=t Fl'lllI M Pllt Clilps '"!!lr Fnlll Lllll Pd Qlfl T Cl!ln'IFRESH ..,. Fl.SH STICKS -CUClt. T_,.,llAl'l'llllilit. ·~­...... u.1.11 ... 1.45 u.1.65 u.1.29 811111111 cnfll 4-flllnll Fllll Crllfl '::t 1.09 l!tATHALLMEA~ L~.!!! • 1111'811 Cllllll Hm m:'v ~ 7.89 SliClcl SWiii a..-=:..~'1:..-.63 VONS POTATO SALAD ==:, """""II-Cl.CM. QaMMMlt ~ V• Fnlll Crm Qem ... ~o:m:...aa SllCllAMtcn~~~-· · • VONSMILD CHl!DDAR CHEESE WllO. ,,.., ... Titl ,.._ L& 1 ~ ........ ~.._ .......... OUSEHOLD NEEDS llMrfMllllll .... '='~.29 r ... ,. ,.,.. ,. ::.."?.: _.8& CHll"FON ....._ TOILl!T TISSUE '"' ...... ~-°"' FROZEN FOODS SIOCl<upon--end-1"" --· '°"'·* ~ .18 Dn1ytllb Wllllll 'l:k .1& • • f • "TntT.,A,,i.CIMr '=°·59 ... 89 ..... ... "1111., ...... Flppn w.e:g,•,t':"' 1.39 "lllll*ClllllClb .':""''~'l:.. .49 ' . ' .IEJlS~llAID..., . ICI! CRl!AM ..._ ... • _.._ "lnlllClbl ·~~ .. 1.19 'J•i•YllR ~-=~ .25 .......... "ti:!" .611 , ........ ='='..::. .ZS . -. . GENERAi. MERCHANDISE' [ipJf~_(IJ . •• .... ;:~,. .57 . i ' • ~ -• ......... ~"="' 2.'4 Elllr'intll&lll ~ .59 s,lnl 'ONI... ....!:'i"O:.m'°" ',53 (Ji r.~Lrs) VIII! our com,.,. lquOr dtpertmtnt #or '" ___ _ ROYAL VELVET VODKA •"'°°'""'Vt: .. """ Sir. Ky.11111111 ~~ .. ~ 4.48 ......... C111ill• VftlUlf =-· 3.99 81111 Ty1111aWllll -~-1.99 KEG BRAND BEER ""'"""' .... '" ..... • ·-l1plltlll Scetm ·.~ 3.99 ................. T~~3.71 1'1111 Mmn ll!Y vn..a-i:=-1.:t11 ~LYR1) , ...... .,. ~ .63 s,1111.ayw lllln Cina '""""°=-~ .19 VONS ,'l, HOT DOG BUNS !!\'-• P'OllYOIMPOIO-8 ..... Clnra .. Paslly ~-63 lllllwlftll F111t P1,a ~~-:.'!l' ll IN THEDA/RY FRESH DUNDEE ~'!.GE EGGS ~ 1 IV•'-•• ~..:.-.49 'D·Zlll-Tlflllll '=' .38 California FRYERS WHOl.l llOOllD 24.US.AVO. WT. ,_PORK ·CHOPS Hl~C DRINKS ALLSWEET MARGARINE .POTATO CHIPS YDISIALUE GROCERIES ' . ,. Out""°""" end -•dd llP to grtaf'tir aavlngs tor you. llillllll TICI Clanll ''llif' .15 SnPl1f Hydrox CGlkla'=' .63 Cni,wrs v.a J•ce u-.A Kiii! BIO SHH '"':~1li:."". .37 FnacU Slllfl ... ' '::f'~37 Kimi llmnllll Pn&entl -.::-.63 VONS ·~ 10~ • ~,!!~Esl , • •. .......... ...........,_"""'.._ ...... " ·-· l"IWIR Qf'IC08ltlROIU.a.DOZ..MA .w : ·11ac111•e111111 "=::: AB 'AppllU•A1911CIMr let era, l•Pflll .=:=.'=" .... az ,llONS C~Af!COAL 69 · BlllQU~· ~ .· l.OMli"LMTM. IUM...... • . 'Flll1'1-Fnll Clckllll '::-.18 . ' . ~' . Nlllillll nlll ""!i:ii=.~W' ;49 "Bl• MRlllll D1t FOltl ""1'~ ... -. .11 'D-Cl\IJlll1 ~U::W-.41 ~ . ,•• ~VIVA . ,...,_ PAPEa·NAPKINS -Alfrtl',O!OOl'IATIMOOLCIM • WDllllr F•Clfl -r"..£"r JI -Fa.,Fnll'wllllna ... ~~ labll Plllllll "'==' .49 Mmnll -11111111:11111 '.#1.'6 FOLGERS ' :.COFFEE ~ ASST'O._GllNDS ~... . ·' ..... -ID• B V»Jl~ Mrff ANYMOCtRYWMR I ,P,110 ADULT' .. -. ' TOOTHBRUSH ""', · .... JTMI~.,. ' ' ' • ·\:' . ,. . ~ \ •( VONS YALUI; ·~ , . ,.,.OQ~E :·. AED·RIPE WATERMELON ....,,,__,.. GOLDEN .. DELICIOUS APPLl!S •AHC,,~,JUCY LI. l.mrls Milhull . :.ZT •• PllNlll ci-111 Pllillr'==I' .71 ' Blaca B111l 8'nJ ~Tm':" 9 CREST = TOOTHPASTE-~ . '1 llEG. Oii _,-INCL. tOOff .ALKA-JEL TZl!R .. ~: TABLETS "'- "mlWISCEMT AHAl.QESIC .1171N~D11~m~a~11~11~·~~'1"-~·~=;. ==·~12~~·V111~P~1kl~&n~,-~n~J~a1c1~~~;.,,~· ~·~&a~d ';t8chllllng a,........_Mllt.,...._,..._, __ ,as M'l'ltctlOtotlHllklauot.....,...._ ___ ..a OIM11lilDadSl'ictdPIOIUed .... WO!llw.1._,,.,..:tT "HwblllnGNY~......,._ .... _ _., AYntJ.,,...NoQlrlclOIDlfODl!ll,M.-•--·•e G.....,WOOdH1mtc1.._,1.._,,. ______ ,_,M 7 DAY AD "'::.=..'t:"~s~:f,,.~~;i.: '#,. tUpWllllOllT-.Mt..1A,.... .... -·---·.t3 Aunt,,._.tKOIWlolbertDlla. ...... •-·-·41 \AJWJ(IS.lldOrtlllnfMla.M,..... .. --.21 • ALL llbf UOtofllllCkTM ..... 1...0. ... ~..... 1.2' FotcllACoftle.t..._QM_,__ ¥ --1.01 ""lftponit«fMlk,1Mr.OM .. ----·.23 ,,..,._.MICll -~~7"~--- o.eef"""""'CeffMt ..... 1 .... ..._ . 1.u f.olger't....,..ntCdhl,,._,, .. ....,.....,_,,14 Royt!CielaUn,111,.... .... ,.. 1/.21 Ct111ta-1•tw111 ••ntf.,._...,_Cllooleltl"" .. 10111 Adams AYL, at Brookhurst, Huntington Beach 5922 Edinger Ave., al Springdale, Huntington Beach 21082 Beach BIVl, liuntlqtDll Bea 34011 Doheny Park Drive, Ca~strano Beach Laguna Hills Plaza, El Toro 17950 Magnolia, Fountain Yalllf ~,,,J-. • • , •.n • -' I .J ! f .f ,J .• ,.1 •' •' •'. ,I•' I ' ' •' • '",• • • ";i. • • , .f2 DAIL V ..-1LOT OPEN LABOR DAY SEPT. 31D from . ' CJ D DRUM VEAL STICKS PATTIES FRESH FROZEN COOKS DELICIOUS TURKEY BREADED c c LI. LB. I 0 A.M.. 7 P.M. SAUSAGE LINKS TURBOT HALIBUT FILLETS STEAKS SWIFTS BROWN· ANO SERVE l ·OUNCE PKG. 98~G FRESH FROZEN BROIL OR FRY c LI. FRESH FROZEN HIGH IN PROTEIN s 89 POUND CINTtRCUT u.s.D.l FRYING 'cii1cKENS coiiii'siiil1MP . LB . • 119 c FRESH FIOZIN •PAN FIY 4 ftc WHITING FISH .................... LB. 7- WK~ 10DY POUND 63, c;uT .UP FRYIRS · · ' LI. . · VARIDYPAK OSCAR MAYER s I 3 6 LUNCH MEAT ROUND OR SOUARE 11-0Z. ,. .... ------------... WE HAVE BEEF YOUR FAVORITE CUTS OF BEEF ARE AVAILABLE AT AU STATER BROS. MARKETS PS * LOW· LOW PRICES PLUS BLUE CHIP STAMPS * LOW-LOW PRICES P'LUS BLUE ~edtt & '8~ ~ Sewi119L HEAD& GLEEM PLAY RX SHOULDERS TOOTHPASTE TAMPONS 0-SO-FHSH U.S.D.A. "ADI-A ................... ,,_ .. IOZIK JAMIL Y TUil C·OUHCI ~-OUNCl TUii HGUl..t.I ~ Wl'll lO'S FOLGDS SNAP-E-TOM GOLOMIDAL s1 1< sl.19 COFRE TOMATO COCICT All ROUI ALLEREST FIXODENT ALB TABLETS ADHESIVE SHAMPOO J.POIJND CAN sftc 67' .... ~ ~ll.IAG ... M 7 6 n.or IJ-ll. llG .•. ....... s1_30 .,. .. • ~r;:;~E ,.. , i~ H-ll. l.IG 12. 75 '-'ClC AGlOf-lC Fot DINTUllS 2 ).Oz IAL$AM llG -OIY.Qll Y 99< 9< ,.,99< ULTRABRIR FACE RIGHT TOOTHPASTE GUARD GUARD S-OUNOTUll IAZOllLAOl$C'S ANTI PttVlllANt 59< 63< !.1.09 MANDARIN ORANGE ~\! .. , ,, oz 31' SLICED PEARS ~~1.11 '"'' 211' BREAKFAST DRINK l?~~~~~ '1.19 ERlANDS SHROOMS 28 GLAZEDCARROTS ~~.~~g"" c'.:'~31' MU ....... ~~zi C ~~~~~~Jf~~R~~~~~u• 3•;u~'. ~~ SPECIAL MORNING. INSTANT 6 3 A-1 SAUCE 'oz 31° •O·OZ 68' BREAK FAS' PKG c CUCUMBER CHIPS ~Si.~i°"" o;oz 32' ..................... OF-4 DEL MONTE DILLS ~"sD,\',0' .. oz 63' ' DESSERT TOPPING 7 7 ::u:io:=1 oT soc _ DREAM WHIP 8-0Z. C DELMONTEDILLS "'"'u 'o""·oz 63' . . .......... PKG. WINE VINEGARS ~!'ii~· 42c 'oz 27' ' OllFFON. PRINTED I 7 ROYAL PUDDINGS REGU\AR J-OZ 13c LUNCH BAGS PKG C JUMBOTAMALES °''"''o' Jo oz49' ............ OF-20 DRESSING MIXES l'WR'5 "' 19' FOR DISHWASHING 6 2 CHEDDAR CHEESE ~~~2~'" ooz 85c AJAX LIQUID KNG C PETMILK ~~·.~·;;!0 12c "~Z~22' SllZE TOMATO SAUCE co•TAo ••• ,,_oz 19' . . .. MJB INSTANT RICE .. o, 44' s 13 5 ::::.~GS .... 10 ... c I 3C . SOFT IMPERIAL MARGARINE " 51 ' ' FURNITURE POLISH PLEDGE ~\~8~\~ . ..'~,~~ $ 00 i ~- FEMININE NAPKINS SAFFOLA MARGARINE .. 41 ' LBS. 73C ZEEWAXEDPAPER ooon 21' FACIAL TISSUE '""'°" ... 1oos 27' BRUCE FLOOR FINISH . _ . noz 91' K 0 TEX l'G:'ulf&... ... . . ... rif~~4 LARGE EXTRA FANCY GREEN 7 2 C BRUCE ACRYLIC :.l'o"oo noz 97' 16-0Z. BLEACH M1AACtE WHITE 26-07 5g: !!~~A ~!~PERS ........................... ~~~.~-·· 8' BORDENS NON -DAIRY COFFEE CREAMER CREMORA .......................... JAR JI FOAM g~:~.. aoz 71' "oz '1.14 · INSTANT YUBAN COFFEE eoz 11.39 MAXIM FREEZE ORIEO $ 115 12 07 !!!!LETT. PEARS ................ 4 i $1 CANT ALOU;ES . LI, 15' CARROTS .. 2 ~~·.29< L-..&,,, ~ '?-' ~~ COffEl C·OZ • 8·0Z • GlflN GIANT • WITH IUfTllt $AUC:I NIBLETS CORN 10.oz. 35c .... PKG. KAVA INSTANT COFFEE eoz s 1.63 JIF PEANUT BUTTER "o' 49' · ciiicKEN P1Es ................. '°.'."~i s2~ FLou1 95 ......... ., io.01. 31 c IOLA·LBP.MBAAG C MACARONl c~l'.~.. •<o. V4NDllCAM'1 enc ENCHILADAS ~'il:g: ";~J .. BREAKFASTSOUARES IZOZ 71' ...... c"""""""' .. ""' 5225 BUC•WHEATCEREAL "0' &7' JOHNS PIZZA ······ '';~~ 3 ' BBllGG :Go: CLUOCCKOYA-PCHUFAFSRMS .··o°', 1~ I !~~~;G ,02 3394: ~~?!~:~IANTPEAS .•ooz 6 FRUIT .. N-CRUNCH r;~:~::s PKG ; HALI BUT 1 01 POPSICl.ES ... sw~no 6~ ... 11 ~29' FROSTINGS :~L~g~~~YSPREAO 165-0Z 51t Sl c.7 TOWff~SI ,. " • ruous1cLes .... BROWNIE MIX ::,v:.~~0<'" ,, •. oz. 65' YUBAN COFFEE 1-POUNDCAN MAXWB.L HOUSE PAUY DWI PRICES EFFEC. 7-FULL DAYS• AUG. 30th-SEPT. ~lh INSTANT• 10-0Z. 5 1.06 5 1 .39 ONION • GAILIC llUl•CLAM 39' W11 RlldHm 1-0tJd S11mps .11 A" StOfllJ 14600 S.. ......,_A ... , W•hRIM'-4' 707 W"t NIMt1an1• StrMt, COit• M"9 61•2 ldl""" A ..... , Htwtl ...... llfecll 260J Wett .. , .. ,,, .... Sm.t, s.t. AH 1811 ClteJ...-,.....,, ._.. h" IJ40 NMfll Tnef11 ......... s..t. AM 1100 IMt com" ..... .,., o,.... 1522 Wftttfthttttt ll•d .. w .. ttMM .... J4JO W.u U1eohl ......... A~• 2610 lcl~ Anne, S.... AH IJlO Mc.F..W.. A'IMM. S... AM 11'4 w ... ,,. ... .,, ......... 14171 1-4 Hiit A..-.. T .... ,,, ..... ltNret, c .......... 1110 N...,.rt lhtl.. c....i M .. 14212 M'-A ...... WNttlef- • ' ' .: ' ·I ' ' r I I I No Strings Attached to Vegetables llf'.IOHN4 BLINN c1bba10 more than seven mushrooma 2 cups fresh string beans, Cover, bake in preheated 350 NEW ·YORK _ "The hap-mlnutes. I thlnk this dish Is a 4 medium.size zucchini, cut purtially-coo~ed d~rees F. oven about 35 l t -··-t rt I rea l test of a good cook Jn 1h inch·thick slices 1 cup graled ~mano cheese minutes. P es ' •-i.w• memo ei because only an experienced have of Chlldhood are of 1tand· k k h d 4 medium·size green pep-Rinle, pal dry and trlm Add green beans, dividing ing 1n. the kitchen at Utat coo nows w en to a d which pcrs, cut in l·lnch squares 1ttm1 of fresh mushrooms. 1mon1 layers of vegetables ; lovely five o'clock time in veget.blet. I cup comely chopped Arrlftl• alternate layers of •i!Oon natural juices over winter when you've come In "Vegetabl es are made more onion muahrOQms, tucchlnl. green ve1eto.bler. Sprinkle top with from playing. There was pungent by the addition of 4 tomatoei, peeled, chopped pe~r, onion, tOmato, and Rqmano cheese i return al,.aya a feeling of an-9-0me garden herbs. Basil or 1 cup celeN, eho......, .. ety In ovenprool bakln1 cuun>le to ovan: lei It bake UclpellCll and Joy. thyma tum• my boiled dinner '' ..... ~ dbh. Sprtnkl• each layer w_Jlh abciut 11 minlltes longer or un- "My mOlher always made It into food fit for a king." i leupoon1 Ol'tgano leave1 ,oregano, thyme, salt and pep. tll ve1etable1 are tender and ,..m lnlerestlns and exciting Goud pinch lhyme per. · chee11 la golden brown. aJl(j welcomed 111 in to wat ch llUIU\ TILi.STROM'S II> t111poon11all Drlzil' olive oil thrilup Great to aerte with meat em! I~," Puppeteer ~Uff VEGET~BLE BAKE y, leatpoon frelhly ground layers, llf\lnr with a fork IO loaf. If desired, chee,. may be UAILY PILOT Burr Tillstrom like• to try hif hand In · tfie kitch•n when his· • fing•n 1r•11't 1nim1tin9 ·Kukla and Ollle ·~estin9 on Fran Alll•on. · Ttl111rOm said, recalling grow-black pepper oil Is evenly d i s t r I b u t a d omitted and passed at the in~ up In Ollca101s north side. __ I__:_pound __ • _1m_a_ll_r_r_•_•_h __ 1_!3_cu_;_p_o1J_v_e_:_(o_r_11_l_ad..:.)_01_l _t_hro_u_,g:_h_the,_c_a_:•ae_:ro,;_l_e. ___ :_t•_bl,;_e. ____ ~-----------==---=:.....:.-====::::=----------'My brother and I would ask, 'What can we do ?' because we were alway1 hungry end waltlna l The smells would come fioatlng by. "~1other wasn't a fancy cook -Ste got better, ac- tually, u years went by and she learned more internatlonaJ di1he1. But It was that Joy of watchlng; lhat's how I learned to cook. Few people recall t h e Depress\on with QlUCh noatalgla, but Burr TlllslrOm, of Kukla, Fran and OIUe fame doeJ, for hi• was a happy family. The greatest girt Burr clalml fs the j()yfld plauur" his parenlJ created at dlMer. The enlhwi laallc warmth of the T!llstroms has spUled over, and Is reflected in his Jile and work. . 11My mother was a Yankee and my father a "black Swede," like niy Grandfather, with dark hair. "He was the son of • Swedllh tanner -there 11 nolhllll more 1rU1al than e Swede! ''ftere It tomethlng about the climate and cold winters and rugged Uving that seems to brlnl a family together, and that helps make meals an im· portont time for lltlrlng and caring. "My mother coold make Je!t..over anything taste so 1ood. It didn't matter what 9"e eool<ecf for Dad. Slte'd literally clean out t h e refrigerator and )1131 keep od· din.I thl• and that. "My fathe r always would alt down at the table and eat and say, 'By God, Alloe, that was grut!' .i can lteor him say It to thiJ day. "My mother v.'Ould be very humble about his praise, and uy something like, 'It's really not all tbal much,' but It really was alw1y1 good. "My brother and I had our father'• example, and when we sat down to meals we always enjoyed and remarked about the food , My lathe' alway1 brought that wonderlul enthusiasm to the table.'' He was here to tape the teed-Ina for the Saturday CBS. TV '1 Chil dr en'1 Film FeaUv8.l." 1'Jt's a funny thing but this same feelin& bal been very Important to me lftd mr work with Kuklopolltans and Fran. You see she has that quality , too. "Sht'1 from Irish-American ltoc:k and 1he'1 pure towa and a greot cook.. Site's going to have a ll!Ue dlnnar P"!'IY far me on Smlday and 1 know lhe'll cook1\lp a ltorm!" Fran ii not aloDe in the depertm«It ol • cool<llll UP stonno. Burt can cook almoat an)'lltlnC, but whit he lov11 belt to create are vegetable di!lhea, at harvest time. "When zucchlnl ia in, I make a thJlli ~t combiner all !he other vegetables,--Uke tomatoes, that come · I n 1c1ethar In Alll\lll. I've made up a dish that Is 10rt of Michigan-Italian. · Miclilgan is ~at celery counto'! l get all the vegetibl1s I can rrom my Ir l·a n d' 1 garden1 and aorMtlmOI I use other •indJ of aquull. '"l'hera'• 1 kind th1t looks like callllfiowtr that's rotmd . "Sometlme1 I cook that In ollvi..tl and put It In the oven, and U Ute ares beans are rlpa, I just slam them and oooit them for a few minute• and throw them inlo the caSHrol• too -towards tht end beclUH J1m careful not to ovenieok lll)'thlna, especially vegetables. "Have you ever h a d kohlnobl in IOUPI My friend with the ganlen tauaht me to use It in soup '1ealUM II never aoftens, • )leU pt-that aim.~ '"l'vwarill "' ... I add ~ wtdpl ti 'llbM:I' lftd , ol -yau _, oook. tha • FOR ADVERTISli(s IN OUT 'N' ABOUT PHONE NORM ST AN LEY 642-4321 • • • 2180 HARIOI BLVD. • COSTA MISA OPEN -IOA~ 7P.M. Monday-Labor Day Sept. 3 BEEF .IS NOW AVAILABLE AT ALL LUCKY STORES! And just Iii time for your labor Labor Day cookout I Flavorf~. juicy, USDA-INSPECTED BEEF! Unconditionally 'Bonded, close-trimmed • every cut trutfilully labeled, llld priced' for GREATER SAVINGS • usual, at LUCKY. All Othar Lucky Storn In Orange County CIOM<f·Shop Early PACKAGED GOODS -... -'11 • .,.MARSHMALLOWS .......... .. ... FRUIT 'N CRUNCH .. ~.\'1:11; 73' POTATO CHIPS .............. ':'.'r,';'I:: 54' ... TORTILLA CHIPS. ....... ~.o:=; 49' ... BROWNIE MIX .... ~~."l:::; 65' .,..sPAGHmL ................ -:::: 47' ... TACO SEASONING. ...... ~::; 21' GRANOLA CEREAL. ......... '.'::::;:: 57' FISHER'S BISKIT MIX. .......... ~.:: 52' BAKING SODA .............. '.'::\i"::: 49' KEY OU Y .,,.1,,, a: '·''·'•ft='• 7-0Z . STYROFO~ CU .t= 43' ALUMINUM FOIL: ......... .n~ 1.55 ... HANOI-WIPES ............ ~:;-,:: SO' PLASTIC WRAe ............... !:O","l:l 35' ALUMINUM FOIL ..... ~.":;t.":149' HOUSEHOLD ITEMS WIZZARD B.B.Q. STARTER .. ~,: 49' LADY LEE BRIQUITT ............ :::: 69' BORA TEEM ................... ='C 1.38 .,-COLD POWER. ........... lm: 1.12 . .,..ELECTRA SOL ....... ~lm: 69·' .... POWDERED BLEACH ...... ::: 65' ... LIQUID BLEACH ............. ::. 55' ... LIQUID RINSE.. .............. ':':: 59 ' ... JOHNSON FUTURE.M':l:':::l.79 KEY BUY 9. PEANUTS . •=75~ Ntc•• a•• DllC9U11111• Pc•"• 'Mt-TIAOIO.AltDMYllJlflllllfT Wtl'11CM.llD l~IM1 ''MllMIP'llO'llCl•f'IUCTlllllUl1Ul,_PllC:al0 MlntmYI •tt• WIMUAY, Mt. M 'fWI Tmht MPJ. 4, ltJI.'" BEEF BLADE CUT CHUCK ROAST RIB STEAK USDA GRADE A FRYING CHICKENS UOl,ITHl•ll Jl'l'lll WMCK.&IOOT CHIClllll 58~ ..... ~.......... s 14 .. ' -NI l/M(ONDITIOlllAl.l.'I' ,. 3• ~ .. IOJIDIO Low E•eryday Priced Deli Items! IUIYEST DAY BISCU1TS , "'"'"'"'."'""""'' ... ICC.CM< 10 PIUSIUIY COOKIS , Ot1X01An °'' ........... ...,, "'-17 ClfAll CllE!SE , .............................. 42 IOD'S DIESSIC , ........................ •oot.IAll 42 USIO PICWS , MGPlPWll MMD.'' ....... DOZ. JAi I 1 DAIRY PRODUCTS ~~ .......... 1w ... a 14' U TOITft.LA , "'''""'-" ............. I~,,.._ 20 APPl.E TlllOYEIS , rustUITr.&Sm •• ,,.,,.,It.OZ.NO. 13 SAUEUUUT HOMEMlDEMllDCIME,. ..... mt.JAll 37c FIUIT SAUD , """ .................. ,...,,,., 19 LADY LEE ICE TEA ............... ~,: 35' PAPER PLATES ' ... SAFFOLA MARGARINE. .... ~: 40' LADY UE 1q CREAM., ........ ~&: 69' CHUCK STEAK::::~~ ........... ., 9.9~· RIB ROAST~::~.~~~.: ............... ~~1'~~· SIRLOIN lip "'" : .•. , .. CUT UP FRYERS·.:: .. :::~::,,~ • EXTRA LEAN .' II GROUND BEEF ............ : ...... s 1 :sa WISHBONE DRESSING ... ':'.=:'.": 40' wn~·s GRAP! ............ ,':'lo'l.'C s1 • Pf4NUT BUTTER'.., ..... ,.~.'I~~ 15' ~ •' • ... SANITARY NAPKINS::':&'.:; 1.15 TRASH CAN LINW. ... '.".'!.'::I; 1.05 l ( !W r v' ll v r111. ~ l'~I{ I VIUAIM4 .. 65t ,._ f if §i'il 1:14•w • ·-· Guaranteed I 0 UE fHt I IN I Sl llUALITY AVAILABLE and .it I 11w. Low Everydoy Prices! HARVEST DAY BUNS ---~~t ,:.::,.~~· CANN[D FOODS "'Ul Nm"' .. •drHlllllp .... ,..1111 " ......... ...,.,.., ~ ....... .. n. "'In Mr ... . RUSSET .. ~-· 73c PO_J ATDES ....... 1 0 :~~~ .. PCT rooos KAL KAN MP"-................ :1.'l:: 46' MAX PAX COFFEE.. ... ~'::1.11 FOLGER'S COFFEE.. ..... ':':1.12 ·INSTANT COFFEE ..... ~~l:1.Z9 SANKA FREEZE DRIED.~\:'\:2.18 lht"1 .. )Ill • '" " ._ ..,. 1rt11 ""'" II ""'* ,.. ... .. lllll"t '" .. ... .. "'" "Ill llt"' .... ,.......,. 1M 11"r UUYO nun'' um1111 GOLD SEAL CH ....... •.., 9 .77 ~OLT 45.MALT LIQUOR •• l!J .79 MATEUS ROSE )VINE.'" ...... ~D3.19 BANANAS ........... , ..................... 1.11 c LEAF Lmu CE SAW> IOWl. •urra. ""'"""' .. '"NC" 14 c EGG TOMATOES "'""'"'LAD ......... ~<i1':'.'.'·.24c FRESH MUSHROOMSIUTTERY.TAITY ........ ll 75c DAILY DIET DOG FOOD. ....... !': 11 ' ... TABBY CAT FOOD ....... :: 15' CAT LlmR ................... == 1.11 CANNED FOODS ... ASPARAGUS ........... , ,::11':.'i: 49' HUNT'S PORK & BEANS ....... ~,: 29 ' ... TOMATO COCKTAIL.:.?~\: 58' ... DILL PICKLES. .......... r'::.::::69 ' ... BACOS BITS ........ ~'1:'::';71' DIET BEVERlGE ..... : ....... ~~z 12' STRAINED IA8Y FOOD. ..... ~ 9' STRAINED JUICE .............. ::-:_:: 9' JUNIOR BABY FOOD ........ = 13' BOUILLON CUBES ........... '.':>~~ 36' LIGHT MEAT TUNA ....... !'.1.1':<: 64' we""""" •1t• lllOflllU .. , ..... '' ---~..,,, • 111 4Van de Kamps • All OVISTIJl•G VAlllTT Of 111511 ~ GOODS ·A~lil1111f •I ..... t ... tl wlrh YHI .11[ ... "1 • . ~;:·~~~~~~~'.~.~~~ .............. 8 2 c AVAILABLE AT DISCOUNT CENTER S ONLY :~~ ~~~·~-~'.~~=~~ ............ ~309 AINSO DETERGENT A wo•hdoy lovor"• for ,.,,.m1on1. EFFERDENT ~~ 96c ---·-m .. :4a,1 ' RXODENT ADHESIVE t-1f2.0s, ... ~l" FASTEETH .oz. 11D.. ! 1 " FASTEETH t.oz.1111..72' KLEENITE .oz. 11u ... 71' ..... 4a,1 V05 HAIR SPRAY MIRE Am-PERSPIRANT $1 09 Chol<e of K,.lod or vnKentitd. ...... --· SALON RNISH FOAM Totol core for fl.Ill wothed holr s 11 • In -.. Of X·Hold, -. . SALON RNllH LOTION lr9Ck't lotol nre fOfb.Mlful hair.'"'·'·~· s 1 07 FASHION PENCILS MAGNETIC PHOTO ALBUM '1'' ,~1,~ 64( 10 PACK ......... , .. :s:s• LIBBEY ROUND WINE OWSES 'I''::.~ .... WING CORK SCREW "r ..,;i WOODEN SALAD BDWLS "' 66c :;:_ .... "111'1 I -111r Jll ........ 1 ........ ~ ... ..... , ••• Le ..... .... &1111 • m L _.._ ltrwt IA&IW , .... , ........ .... CAIMA PAii • JIM ... a... C.A9A·ltM .... .... •• CIYMltl ..... rs .... MllllT·U....._ ._ ..... , ..... . ........ ,,.1 ...... . ....... 1 .......... .... ... u • , .... "'"' ... . ....,. IA•· 1U W. •·•I ....... IUCll ... , ..... ...... ----.... *" ... cw.. ... ~llW·,_..._..,. ... w,. U.lllAIA ·Ll ............ (11. UllWIOO .............. a.. IAW-.W • 14411 k. ...... M. -.. . ...i ........... . lnlltol • 1'111 ....... -:.-:. '=-~ ...'; ~=.:;. ... ,...... .............. .... •n••·••·--.... ,, .. .,.....,_ _ ...... -.... PIMMU ·•Lftl ..... __ , ..... _. _ ..... ,,, ..... ... Nllt • • w ....... ...-. WI -···· • 014.I ....... It. LSAlll ...... ·1111.a.f-M WI ""'° · I.at II• It. "'"' ~':.ia"" .......... wna~ ·M•~..., M111 IAfl ·mt ,.,...... M ~·1'M .... C-'""· ........... ,...,... .... 1'1MltA ·•M ......... .. """ . um ...,.,. ....... t111t. W1011tR • tm ""9111 .. .. wam1111• . 1•11 .,...... "· ftTMllS'la • tt• • ........, WllTlHI • IMIJ haft ft 1,1, N"'9. 11111 I. Ntl• M W!IMllijTfll lttl -., A,._ .. ................ ....., .... --------~ ............ .... 1 -. . ·------------------· . - • Dl\fn'INT rlNllQ Ollll\. ••PUil n• ~O N IJO;> llfMI f~O"' ..... ii"( ·~~.IJh IJ rurl ANO' ••• '~ •11!11 EVAPURE ACID AND CHLORINE ACID ML .~147 , .... ~2'~ !"~\ ----· WOODEN SALAD FORK ':/ & SPOON SET ~ _1 .. 47c • .......... !. "t I ' REVERSIBLE SCATTER RUG s 12' ~·.~· .. ST. MARY'S 38"x;.;;.~, · BATH SHEETS ti'' U" Doubl• loo.-4 $2'' . ' ttlttn, ,.... ' SUMMER GOODS CLEARANCE I' You'll tlrid 1ovtn91 on oll lel1ure time ,POdvct1. Shop now etMI ,... -...... more on tome fllltOf tafflpletl MEN'S SHORT llEEVE KNIT SHIRTS ll'la....,_IL $2'' :Z'74 SHOAT SLEEVE SPORT SHIRT .... ........... s4•• ··~"'"' cotttfl at ...... SHORT SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS llUlt , .. ,,. ,. ,, 6S%po~"-$4'' let"/35% COi• I~. Sotld1 . ) " I I ' ~,,\•····· ' I ' ' .... ' ' .. ' ' ' 44 DAILY PILOT Wednt~, August 29, 1973 Super Shopper Groceries DILL PICKLES Regular or Kosher -Springfield 48 oz. A-1 Sauce • . • • • • 39c Great on meat! S oz (10 oz ••• 69c) Stuffed Olives • • • &9c Spencer Queens in 7 oz. jar! . Salad Dressing.oz. • 33c Viva Italian, Green Goddess -7 Seas Pork 'n' Beans • • • 29c Va n Camp's in rich sauce! ·No. 211i POTATO CHIPS Granny ,Goose -10 oz Twin Pack! Gatorade • ~ • • • • • 37c Choose Citrus or Ora~ge -32 oz. Snack Crackers • • 45c Choice of Nabisco's (except Triscuits) Heinz Relish • • • • 29c Burger, Hot Dog, Sweet Pick le -9:1-1 oz. Non-Fat Milk • • • • .1 '' Ca,;,ation Instant ••• 10 Quart package! HEl.8Z. 27c , KETCHUP The slOw .one! 14 'ounce bOttle B • s12' rim uz• ••••••• Freeze dried coffeir•(8 oz ••. 2.18) Folger's Coffee • ~ 9gc One pound can (3 lb. can ••• 2.69) Trash Bags ••••• 59c Glad -pkg of 5.33 gal size Dutch Cleanser • • 1 oc Old favorite in 14 ounce size Charcoal 7 9c IRIQUETS · J\ingsford -clean· hardwopd -10 lb . Fire Starter • • • • 29c Sprinlefiel:d, for sure starts! quart Gala Napkins •••• 27c Save on family size 160 count pkg Facial Tissue •••• 29c Ch(ffon , assorted colors or white! 200 ct Toilet Tissue ••• 4. s1 Chiffon ••• two roll packs ••• stock up! t I S•nllries ' Excedrin S J 25 TABUTS Now'1 the tlme to get the 100 ct size Bath Powder • • • • &9c Shlwtr to S~r: .. 7 ounce size -J· Head I Shoulders 513' Lotion dllidndl' 1hampoo in 7 oz. oize s., •.. · '$ J 39 Deodortint : 11"1 New! ••• ood oll'ecUve! 9 <10, opray ' It's a big .3 day week-end • • • traditional time for 1172 sz ...... . I N "I .. ' ' . " . ~ . Plan a patio party -make-:i!'qtpool-side funtime o; '' . ' • ' ' s ·~ ,. • 1 •11 a~u i• as · 18 17111910 Slit 1;_, 24 IS 21 27 JI It , . " a 1ANCHb . ·~:,.aos• J , . "'y ' . • I l' ~ ..,.,.. .. . -'~ .. pack a picnic basket -but,. let ·it alL begin at El Rancho! Super Shopper ; . frpzen Footlsl ! SPARE RIBS • ... t . ,;. • $.,'2!. Lean, wi th so much meaty gooc;lnesS! :::LE $11!. El Rancho's, big enotlgh for a crowd! .. I fr111h ,,,.,,~~ They'll know it's a holiday for sure when they see turkey .•• tender, mouth-wateritig tUrkey •.• is ihe heart of the menu! PLUMP HENS ••• 10-14 LBS. • • •. • • • • • • ¥ 1 • Sausage .• ".,.. •• st~· El 'Rancho's own well seasoned blend! CHUCK $TEAK . ·.., .. ' Cooked Ham · •••• s1 gt Fully cooked, semi;boheless-Tiger Town. (llonael Clre ll """ . : : llahet ••• UI a.) Center Cut •.• U.S.D.'A. ·Choice betl! El Rancho Ha11 " 'i'ou know the quality wh'en the El Rancho name identifies thes'e selected pork legs, smoked' and cured according to our specifications! FULL SHANK HALF • • • • • ' ' . BUTT $109 PORTIOI .. • • • • HAM SLICES ' . )· .$1 ·~. El Rancho quality; smaller portion! · Center Cut ..• thick or thin slices fPBBh . Magnificent is the word for it! Fresh. from Pacific waters and rushed to El Rancho! You'll love this treat broiled, baked or barbecued ..• and you'll be glad we thought of it! CENTER CUT STEAKS • • • • • • • • • IL Rock Cod • • • • • • s 1°?. Turbot Fillets • • • g9c, Cooked Shrimp • • s 1 't Fresh Fillets! Mild flavored favorite! Rushed here from Greenland waten! Just right'for shrimp cocklail!' English Sole • • • • s l 6t River Smelts • • • • 69t. Smoked Halibut~-. • 515t Fresh Fillets! Mild and sweet! From rushing waters of the Columbia! For-a·delightfully different tute treat! Delicatessen Delectahlesl Rath' s Canned Ham ... s 1e. s12E ••• 56•1 Famous "Tender and Mild" ••. fully cooked, ready to serve or glaze anff heat! Just the thing for your picnic or patio buffet. • Shrimp Cocktails • 33c Lascco: first in quality -4 oz gl'ass PUICH 3 1 'n' ·aAGS . ,... $ Eight 8 oi. fruit drink• witt straws . . Sharp Cheddar • • • 79c Knudsen's , •• naturally delicious ••• 9 oz Roqqefort Dressing,..Ssc Fisherman's Wharf 8 oz <BJ!l.e Ch-·•-49e) ,.. ' :) ' ...... Sliced . Swis5 ., • • • 45·c ; , ... , From Cache Valley chem people • 5 oz Super fresh P'°"1(tl : , . Cocktail Rye • • • • 39c Bay'a party size slices ••• 16 ounce ' . MILK . ·5 $1 SJl4KES. . " I~ ~ .. 1.,. ll&VOll't.lltey.love .91/4 oz _. . ' • ' ... r-'• ~ • ~··,. ' ... .. ' . • .. ' • • • • • , M ~· .~ . . .. ~·· :.Iii elons •••••••.•• isc. Chel'l'J Tomatoes • • • .. • •. • • •. 29t The aristocrat ~f t e melon family • , . juicy and ripef ' Red ripe little gema in 12 ounce basket! Romaine L •••••••• : 19~ Radishes or Onions ••••••• lOt · unchea are all green! Red radi1he1, green onion• for usty nivor! . ' · d. ti.rough Thur. Aug. 30 throUJlh Sept. 51 ... Open daily 9 to 9. Sunday 10 ta 7 ... No '"'" to deqler1 .. .ORAIGE JUICE Springfield 6 oz c1n (12 oz •.. 32~) ·. Pizza Rolls • • • • • 55 c Jeno's -Pepperoni or Sau~e . ~ 6 oz . Broccoli Speats : . 3 .. s1 · C & W .;.,. 1•rd<n goodnt;11 , • '. 10 oz L-adei·-"' ... 8 .. s1 Minute Maid Pink or Reg (12 oz 4 for $1 .) Strawberries • • • • 33 e · Springfield, sweet slices ••• 10 oz. p~. ICE CREAM Royal Host catering quality -half-gal. • Gii •RUM e •VODKA .• o-··· Y•·-··· s32! Your choice by the bottle ... or mix · and match the case of 12 at 37.50 ... C d. s411· ana 1an..., • • • • . El Rancho'• ••• ao smooth! fifth , ~ .. ··-. Scotch a1 1191, •• ~ •• s57•~ Bottled in Scotland : 5th ~qUirt • ; . 6.89)' Vodka -nm • • • • 5777 Hair gallon at this price ! (quart ,· •. 3.991 Sii( SI.II , , _,!llS SCOTCH 86 proof ... hair gallon ••• gro1t bw! , . Springfield 8 5c . •••. ,. - Cl,l'lOJl ·of six 12.oz CA!tl~ Mr; &,~··$· f;S ',.:·~ .• 99~ Popular Bloody Mary M11 • , • 25 oz btle , Margarita Mix • • • 89 La Paz make it so easy,! Quart bottle ,.. Sweet & Sour Mix 75~ 'ravern blend of flavors! Quart bottle ~ ' , , .~ . . ·!"illj l .._I t •aia ; .. ... .... • " • • • • . • • ~ • • • .. •. . • :J ~PILOT-ADVERTISER .. ,? .. • • MESA YBDE VIEW E ' . -S69,950 •. e most ol jhe blot In ~ ~ l'fojl\e• 2-at<>cy itt On '• hW ov'r)ooktng Jfl.'.inttngton 'Beach - ~ff. C&tall~~on a clear day and ~Jng llehts Elle., t Bedrooms -~' C&m111 rtoQm -wet larire cov~ patio and deck. Cnll 545,.2313 ppolnt1nent. . . . BRING THE 1<1US aid move inlo thiJ one yefll" new, 4 bedroom _b51Jne. The unique, open floor pl.an provides space plus~prlvacy. The vaulted Jiving room celling is rreat. tor hi.fl and wanned by a beautiful fl.rc-ptfoe. Brtek •fence surround! a plantabl' yard. Easy access to the community pool. Only $44,900 -"'hile it lasts. Dial 962-8851. " ·~ • SIMON SEZ 1tep lnt'O this 4 bedroom, 1 %. bath mLW-castle. Euy~ floor plan In, an ideal family neigh-. . borhood. All U1e extras plus t\\'O covered pa- ' l106. Just $29,al .. SlnlOn. Sei call NoW!-9(52-8851. ,RARE MESA VERDE I FoUR-PLEX : ~e' 3 t>edroom • .2 bath ,Q\'ilel'S unit \\ilh 3-2 • bedroom m.ita1L Faces a '_park in a real pride of ownership area. nnt time adv,rtlsed. $85,950. • lli6:.TI 71. • ' ·t , • I NE ..... t',BB~OI . . .... - ' Wednesday, A119ust 29, 1973 OAILV PILOT 45 I ' "'. , :~· . t .. • • , ~= . ~) BAC THE' RIGHT : PROPERTY! ' ' ' •t<'Ji'.~,.fl'/1~ ' $7,500 PRICE REDUCTION HARIOR VIEW HIW VIEW • FEE LAND ' Lovely four bedroom home with family room and separate laundry room. 2 fireplaces, large, sunny patio In pool 11.zed yard with lots of privacy. Panoramic ocean viett. and you 0"'" the land. $97,500. ~1ake an offer. can now. 673-8550. DOCK AND SHOP Beautifully maintained 3 bedroom home on ao ideal lot for boot or camper near ex- cell~t ahoppl.ng. This house is planned for ta.inUf, living. The owner wUI take a large second T.D. against the low purchase price of $29.900. See it tloday-ship In tomomiv.1: Call~!. ·· ·M~A VERDE 4°Pt.EX-$62,500 !\lesa Verde's best buy! All ne\\' carpets all unlt.B. CUJ-de-sec location. Pride of owner- ship. All 2 bedrooms. Enclosed ~es. \Valk to 1hopping. Better Hurry! $62,500. 546-1600! ' TRl;PLEX-6 PATIOS Fixer units. All 2 bedroom units. 2 patios each unit. Central ?iftt1a locatJon. Jog to bench. Comparable-unlta just sold for $6500 morel Take advantage. 546-1600. r~XCQ.LENT INVESTMENT · ·PROPER'l:Y-$251900 fuvt<' r.,..e"bedrooms, •carileted ~ \,a/rited ,_\11* tbroulbout. hu"e yard 'will). boat ao-· cess, exceJlent condition. Low caJ!-h, d01''n to the assu1nable rnA loan \\'ith S200 a month total payment You couldn't put your In- vestment doUan in a better place. C8..ll ncm• ti> see. 847-60id. • FM. IE.DROOM IEAUTY - LOW, ·LOW PRICE . .. Tinal.Iy a home big-enough for your family. It's a 2-itory in a 10\'ely area with 5 roomy bedrooms and a lot of special extru such u very attracUve lnterlor decorating It beautifuJly mnJntalned yarW. The price is unbelle\•ably low -onJy $37.900. It Is ab- solutely I.he 10\\·cst price 5 bedroom quality home in t'O\vn. Better hurry -It'll go fast. ' That's right! We'll do our very best to find you the special needs in the home of your choice. We have the experience and know-how to make your dreams a reality. Let us help you choose from our tremendous selec· -lion of txdusivo Ustings. Remember we are the largest locally owned Real < Estate firm with over I 00 professionals to help you every step of the way. Please drop by, we w~I be happy to answer any of your questions. "SEMI-CUSTOM HOME" Tutefully landscaped + decorated. 4 bedrooms (master bedroom is huge), 3 baths, formal dining rooni, large family 1·oom. A home for people \\'ho like to entertain their friends nicely. Located ~t mile from ocean in one of nicest close-to-bea.ch areas. Prictid ·at $52,950: ~2535. BEST BUY IN CORONA DEL MAR 3 bedrooms, tamUy room on tee land for $59,500. Nice slzed play yard. A<X'ess to ShorecUft'.s private beaches, panelled fam- ily room \\'ith book-shelves and Swedish fireplace, custom shutters, v.·allpapcr and charmlng "'O<Xien 1nantel on brick fire- place in. Jiving room. 673-8550. UNUSUAL Cj)UAUTY Extra large fee lot with view of ocean and approximately 1800 square feet of ctUtom ho1nc in Corona del Mar at a price of $89,- 500. lt1any posslbllltles tor expanSlon of this - 3 bedroom home or for~ addition of a real &\':imming pool.. Call to see. 673-8550. BUILDING F.OR LEASE CORONA DEL MAR pne -t\VO -or three floors. Total Is 7,~'()() sq. ft. for l~ at only 25c per sq. ft. -in Corona dcl Mar, on E. Coast Highwa.v "' -for more infonnatf~ please call 673--8550. EASTSIDE COSTA MESA $25,000 This 3 bedroom home has large shade trees and a large lQl It'a toda¥'• buy and \Vlll be tomoJTOw's 1t,al. Take a quick look! 646-7171. SALUBRIOUS SERENITY IN MESA VERDE ARE YOU A BEACH NUT? 1 mini block from the water in Newport Beach. Plus an income unit above the large double garage. Priced at only $70,000. Hurry Co.II 646- 7171. VACANT! Cj)UICK POSSESSION Assume 7% FllA loan 'A•ith JO\,., down and payn1ents less than rent -roomy 3 bed- room home with 2 baths -just repainted in &out. Brand new carpets -Excellent Huntington Beach area. Total pric' just $32,900. Hun-y! CAll 842-2535. UVE ON THE WATER This is that rarity -a waterfront home 'vith assumable 7~% loan! Fully air con- ditioned 5 bedroom, 3 bath home with 45 foot boat dock just off huge entertainer's patio. Newly pe.inted inside. Priced at $115,- 000. To see call 842-2535. "GOVERNMENT ASSUMABLE LOANS" \Ve have several 3 & 4 bedroom homes "'ith assumable loans at 7% and 7% 'iO interest. No loan fees. And o"ne of them has a pool! For further lnfonniltlon on-these homes call 842-2535. A WOW! COLLEGE PARK POOL HOME Just made available--3 bedroon1, 2 baths. surroun.ded by roses and trees. $40,000. call 646-7171. EXECUTIVE SWEET Fantastic space, in and out. Five bedrooms, Bonus Room. Family Room and Formal Din- ing Room, all on a qUlet clll-de-ssc. Park- like back yard, v.•ith covered patio and fruit tt~s. Too good to last at $65,000. Call right av.•a.y. 962--8551. 3 BEDROOM MESS • • • WITH POOL AND JACUZZI 847°6010. Come wlth us and blspect this 4 be&"OOm beauty with 21x23 PamJly Room and you'll agree! Its a ranch style, L shaped home '\'hlch embraces a lushly landscaped back- yard with extra space for boat or camper , pad and work area. Walk to schools and THREE IEDROOMS + .to""· 159.900. eai1 546-2313. Pre-conditioned by active kids. CUstom crayon walls and many other unusual fea- tures. Tu·o bat.Ju and family room. Great Kitchen lay-out includes tile-top lslnnd range surrounded by tremendous cupboard ------SPARKUN(;-l!OOL ---·-·-·· -----IHIS -IS-- S33,750 SUBURBIA PARK! Now ii the time to get the end-of-summer price on that pool home you've been want- in:;::. This Js an exceptional price for such a dollhouse. Spacious floorplan, lov,Jy car- peting, pretty area and many additional extra fe11.turea. Call now! 847~010. , · ) HOUSES ON 300 FT. LOT $46,000 ZonM. to build mon! units-conv,nlent east Costa Afesa location. Rents could be ~520 annually. Better huny on this one. Call 646-n 71. Live in one ot th'e moot desirable neigh- borhoods In Huntington Beach. Popular one-story model featuring 4 bedrooms, family room and fonnal dlning area. Adult- occupied, this home is Unmaculate through- out \\"ith manicured landscaping, front & rear. Qutstandlng location, near .element- ary school, park, fennis eourt& bike trail and beacli. Priced at $51,900, several Items of persooal property included. Please phone 546·2313 for additional Information. -and storage·space, The pool-and" ja.cuzzl"llre beautiful, in a completely prlvat,,yard with a fire-ring. Unbelievable, but a bargain at S37,500. ~luster up courage and call 962-8851. POOL, DARK ROOM &AME ROOM and 1nany other bonus extras too numerous to mention. Large !\!aster Bedroom suite, private patio, crackling ""ood burntna: fire- place wtth•gas starter, family1'6om, eat-In kitchen, slate·entry. Compare thl1 Newport Riviera 2-story for features and value at ohly $32,000. call 546--2313 tor an appoint- ment. "HARBOR VIEW MONACO" Enjoy the O<'ean bre»zes and gl'een~lt llvlng In this enchanting community. This .delightful 2 bOOroom and den is fuUy upgraded·wlth custom decorator's drapes and tilC's. 'fhc patio is a true drlight. Nicely landscapcod -lots ot fruit treeat Ilu1Ty for this !)Ill' at on ly S65.500. 54&;2313.· HUGE TREES Cozy 3 bedl·oo01, 2 bath home on corner lot. Got a boat or' trailer! Lots or mature trees and shrubs set this home apnr1. ,\JI this plus Rssum· able Joan for $32,950. To i;ec call 842-2535. POOL HOME ·. NEWLY LISTED Exceptionally-clean 4 lx>tlroo1n, 2 bath home. Thick shag carpet throughout, nicely draP"CL Oversized master bedroon1. Beautifully maintain- ed 17x32 pool. ln one of niet>St beach areas and pric:cd at $36,900. To see. call 8;,42-2535. · .. " A MANY SPLENDORED THING IN MESA VERDE ..,. Be prepared-it'll take your brmth away. Se- lect quality materials and superb artistry have been combined to create this di$tinctive .home. 3 bedroom, 2 baths, 2 rirc places, completely cw:- tomized inside and out. Sparkling pool with Ja- cuzri ne'.stled In patio which boasts a built-in ~rick BB~. 2 blocks from the O:>untry Club. Thia one must be experienced. Price1$79,500. 546·231.;l. NO fUWS IN THIS . DIAMOND This immaculate beauty has a 14K look from its sparkling bfight kitchen to its beautifully deco- rated 3 bedrooms. Even the nlRnleured yards ~ ~--iil impresstve. Priced a.t only $33.500. I.his jewel R\.\'aits your j.nspeetlon. Call 847-60JO to see. . ,, • • A LOT OF LOVE 1 and a tl~t will make t his 4 bedroom hon1' a euUt. Electric buUt-.ln1, waU-to-wa.11 carpets &nd a 'nll:i< 'bottom prioe &t $25,50(), Dial 96l"8851 nqw. COSTA MESA . Y PROUD R This brand NEW LlSTING. A spotless one owner 2 bedroom and convel'tible,den home. Sincerely the most trnmahulat' "Mon.co" ?<.!odel ln all Of Harbor VINT Homk plus an ovel'slzed lot (85'x 152'). btauUMly landsca,ped "1th la~ covered patio. Carpets, d~ and 1\\-'8.llpe.per &ll top q~l­ ity. See it, you'll love ltll Call now. Only $65.950. 6'73-85M. B1JNTINGTON BEACH OCEAN IOULEVARD CORONA DEL MAR VIEW Old Spe.nlsb 5-bedroom, den. formal dining room, family room on over.sized lot just steps from the beech with1 a fa11!1ous ocean view. The only spa· ~ authentic: Spanish home with all of the charm >ef Corona del !\1ar. can now for appolnt- mcn t. 1)73.855(), TO BE HONEST This cute little 3 bedroom home needs wrne yard \\Ol'k, but the home itself has beton \\'ell cared for. lt has nf'arly nrw carpeting ftnd dlsh,vash'r and e\'cn a buitl-ln aquarium. At $30,500 il'!I a !iUJX'I' buy and "<t>ll "'orth R little rnnh,"Ork. Has assu1nable loon. Call nov: fol' mo1~ lnfonnatlon. 874-6010. • ', ,, ... "~.,... ... • ....,'71 ,127 ... ~~· ,, ........ ,. • • I " , 17'11.......... 601 ea.zn• w,....., .... 147·6010 CORONA DEL MAR lll ............. 673·1550 IN\'ESTMENTS 2790 HGJ:.0. Blvd., Soito JOI ' C:om. M-54 .. 1600 ' I . . ( .. \• ' l, i-• I .. l I ' . ' OAILY PILOT • Wtdntsday, August lq, 1973 PILOT·AOVERTISER .(4 Announc"'*"' • • . soo . 5'24 The Bluest Marketplace on the Orance Coast Mobit Home1 for W. , , . l2S • W9 Au1oi1 11 llE), , . , , 9SO • 990 locM I /lclrre loui11m1nt 900 • 9" -... 100 ·"'9 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS '-'~· . . ' • • • • • • '2.S • 549 p.,, ond Suppliei. . • • • • • ISO • 199 bol f 11oi. Genetal. • ' •. • 00 .J "' ,....,.... .. . .. 200 ·299 ••• 100 -1'24 , .5SO ·S14 .. 800 ·849 You Can Sell It, Find It , Trade It Wit'1 a Want Ad (642-5678] One Cal I Service Fast Credit Approval a.ntol • . . . ' • . . • • • 300 •• . ' Schook ond lnltrvc:tlon , , • S1J • 599 · Ser'licH ond 1tit9oin • • · • 600 • 699 T1an'f>Ofkl,lion. • • • • • • • 9\5 • 949 , :l~~:-~~;~~:.~;-~~==-;~~~=~:;_:~::'. ... :~~-=~=~-~~~~;~~;-~~~-~~; ... =i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;~~;;:~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~;;~~ :d~R~~'~ .. A~;:~ ... ~ .. ~~·,~~~\':~~y.t~~; 11~[---··· ........... ;]~[eiiii~![~-""";;"•'";; ... ;';;;Jl;e;;] [ ...... ,.,s ... ]~[ ............. ]~ [ ...... , ...... )[~] [ ...... ,., .... JleJ[ ...... , ...... ][e] DAILY PILOT 111umo1 ll1blllty for tho flrsl lncorNCt lnMrtlon only. --------------- [ How•farW. Gener•! General ~-S.l.d ~ MDASSOCIAT!S REALTORS 2128 EASTCQQT HIGHWAY OORONA DEL MAR. CALIF. 644·7270 MORE THAN JUST A DUPLEX IN CdM Bcaulllul rustic 2 bedroom, open beam ceil· ings with charming brick fireplace, bullti n kitchen in this front unit. JUST BEING COMPL ETED, so you can pick your own colors and carpets. 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, cozy fireplace , buUtin kitchen. Best location in Old Corona def Mar. $95;500. LUXURIOUS BLUFFS CONDO LIVING Live in the prestigious BLUFFS. New Span- ish tile entry, new carpets & drapes, pleas- ant fireplace, large homey kitchen, 3 bed· rooms , 21> baths, right-on the lovely Green- belt. One of the best ! $62,500. A BOAT SUP ' GOES WITH THIS CONDO Thi s lovely Z-story end unit has everything -even a BOAT SLIP. tntra modern kitchen with all new builtins. Attractive stone fire- place, 2 Bedrooms 2¥2 Baths. SUNDE CK overlooking the waier. All this can be yours for $86,500. Whtn you list with ul, I YOUR HOME is adver- tised in Home for Liv-i Ing Maga:rlne in mor•1 than 900 areas-and cus~ I tomers are sent to you •• rehrr1l1 from ot.1r over 770 11fflll11te1 of NMLS. 2821 E. Coa1t Hiway Coron• dtl Mar General Gener ii General Genera l Half gone In half a year and the rest will not last long. Hurry lo see this disti nctive Newport Beach development of condominium homes, buil t·in clusters around handsome courtyards. Eighl superb models, each a masterpiece of luxur!,4 comfort, conve nience an d quality construction. Sundecks, fireplace, wet-bar, elegant Master Suite, Sun-LiteCI kitchen, private enclosed doub le garage. Recreational facilit ies include heated swimming pool, lighted tennis courts, sauna, therapy pool. All exteri or building and grounds maintenance provided. Satisfy your curiosity-see Newport Crest loday! Two. Three, and Four Bedroom Condominium Homes from $62,995 g•,t~;"J-. --Financing Available at 7J/40/o * *DUPLEX* Attractive ground floor, fresh. ly deoor. units. 1 &: 2 Bdrm11., dbl. garage + fenced park. Ing. 2 Blks from 17th St. shoppng, 0v.1'fer finance • m ,;oo. From PllciHc Coast Highway Hf;H~'Y and Superior Avenue (Balboa Blvd.), dri\.'e up Superior lo ·nconclerogil. and directly to Keep in shape in tilis Jr. Newport Cr~51 lnformr1tion Olympic pool, f..:ovcly :: bed· Cen1cr,T.,l,,:phone: (714) 645-6141 --------~ REALLY SWIM! roo!D in Westi:hff. Ern·loSl'd l Sdlcs Office ol)l!n dallv patio offers pn vacy and L'Ot'·~ HJ a.m. to suns..it ros.642·2668 ner gives indePf'ndence.1 Only $69.995. I PETE BARRETT -REALTOR- 642-5200 1---------I CLASSif1ED 6-12.5678! I 4-----Generll THE BLUFFS BEST BUY I 11X" Is this super floor plan. One yr. old condo is being offered for $69,500 INCL. LAND ! 3 BR's., 21> ba., fam. rm. 1800 Sq. ft. Call Toni Escobar $79,500 TO $129,500 • French, Spanish or California n -\Ve have 7 Harbor Vie w Hills . Lusk built homes . Pools, panoramic views. Excel. coin. loc. Let Us show You. Burns . • 'fy picul c\ln1·(:nuunal financing of .::;o y£>ar Joan : Ca.~h prlcf' or Plan 1 $6:.!.995f du"'·n paym£>nt $12.695: 360 monlhly pay1ncnts or $361.00 (prin- cipal & lntcrcs11 o.t 8 1,·~ ANNUAL P ERCENT- 1\GE R1\TE. General General LUXURY CONDOMINIUMS BY THE SEA NEWPORT BEACH 2. 3 & 4 Bedrooms-2 or 21/2 Baths. For n1al Dining Roo1ns. Pool. Sauna & Tennis Courts. SPAR KLI NG NEW-MOVE IN NOW ANXIOUS-MAKE OFFERS EXCELLENT TERMS Re•I E1tat1 ConsultantJ 1525 Super ior-Suite 3 Newport Beach 1714 1 645-3230 o .... ,., INVESTMENT-INCOME PROPERTIES CUSTOM BUILT Medlcal-Dental-26 Suites 26 ~ride of ownership suites. Large center. Ma1or cross streets. Over 27,000 sq. ft. Iii re turn. Low maintenance. Sea soned leases. $200,000 down. CaU for profit analysis. 4-Plex-Reduced-$4 7,000! Sharp units. Just redu ced to $47.000! Fur- nished. Low vacanC)'. 7.3 tin1cs gross. Per- fect re ntal location. Cn ll today. Motel-107,000 Sq. Ft. Site adjacent to free\vay offramp. Almo st 21/2 acres! EZ Terms. Build to suit. Petiect for motel , restaurant, commercial, units. Only $1.02 sq. ft. Cal l now. 546-1600 INVESTMENT DIVISION * * * * * * Lovely cu11lOnl built fnn1ily W• •"9 horn~ near Bnycrest Arca, • II•-. cl08t' 1.o e.U schools. ~ fer "*'YO .. I Bedrooms ~·Ith I a r ~ r clOSell, 3 baths. l'ola. ... ter Suite hu bWlt-ln se\~:in~ center and adjoining den. Living 1'00n1 has COrT'IC'I' fil'eplnce, IRf'KC fnn1ily roon1 \\'ilh dlnlnK nn·a ll l us I llrenkl'bst hnr. 01·1UJJ.:c frees I an(l lntit trees thr\\'c in tht' pa!lo nnd yard. Priced nt just S~l9,900. Call Coh\•c\l Cl&-05.;.; 4 BDRM. -WITH POOL - SCHOOL TIME ASSUME LOAN $32,500 Nc,vport Beach. _\ great Deluxe 2 story with Immaculate fark. Ukfl: location tpr children. Half n I sunk en livi ng rootn. yard. Sharp bedroom block from Newport H!ls Fninily rm, fireplace. in move in condition~ Elen1entary School. Wal ng I Dinin g rm homemak-FBmily rm, fireplace. distance to Hornce Ens n , ' · Dini g m gas bull' and Harbor High. Thh1 2 er s kitchen with bwlt n r ·• v bedroom, 2 batt\ home ha.s ins. Patio. Block wall ins. \Von 't last long! I a r &' e, adaptable fan1ily fencing. BEAUTIFUL ! 54()..1720 ~ll;,·suse neel. to~: :['~;, $41.950. 540-1720 MESA VERDE acce~1 fl> park )''Out camper j BEAUTY <ir trailer. ASAume the 6%% TURTLEROCK Phenon1enal 2 story 4 \'A loan O\\'C 2nd .• Just SPECIAL bedroom in the best ~li,900 Cn ll COL \VELL 1 646-0555 1 Go rgeous 4 be llroo1n h'lesa Vercl e area. Fea- j executive home. Pati o, tures formal <lin ing I sprinklers fronl & rear. roo1n, Livin g roo m, Separate famil y room. family roo1n & master Dining room. Gourmet suite each with own kitchen. Pools & tennis fireplace! 3 baths. . • . I • court~ available. YOU Beautiful decor. Large * I 'OWN THE LA ND! Very tree shaded lot. Nearly I-. __ prestigious. $57 .950. 2500 sq. ft . in the house ONLY ~25,950 I 540-1720 ! olonc! $57,950. 541).1720 *TAYLOR CO. LINDA . ISLE BAYFRONT-$195,000 . . ... ,,,,. 11.;, , en. 2• DA. ARBOR BLVD Exclusive island of boating oilers the ulti4 huge 20·.,:::.!· 1·11111 rn1" 1·m., ! 2955 H 1nate in prestige li ving . Priva te tenn is, ''"'·'· f'r111 ~. l'll'I.-..~ 10 E;-;tanl·in I • b~acb an~ security entra nce. Ar.chit~ct de~ High. P l'lred unrler n1111·!<•~L : COSTA MESA 540 1720 sign 1n thlS lovely 4 bdrm ho111e \V Jth library. I • fo rm DR playrm & 2 wet bars. Pier/float. BACK BAY DUPLEX. "'!!'-""!-""""""--~!!!!!!"'1'...,.,. __ ..,1 "Ou llfh y ,. 2 BR un its, dbl riet . gar, on =oonorol ~---rel r e•r largt 71 'xl00' lot in country '"'"' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors at"""•"'"'· r.-1oe<1 right at 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road $39,950. ''Overlooking Big Canyon Country Club'' NEWPORT CENTER , N.B. 644-4910 -~ ---~******************~ SUPER SPECIAL-BRAND NEW Cho ice of l\YO of finest 4BR, 3BA homes in Newport Beach-Spacious interiors, super location OPEN DAILY I TO 5 PM, STOP IN & SEE 1801 Santiago Or., N.B. 1600 Harrow Place, N.B. ,...__,,, 1 645-7221 VI JIU°'211733 WESTCLfFF DR. ~ NEWPORT BEACH BEACH DUPLEX Exterior ne\\'IY pain1cd, 3 Brt &: 2 BR, unit., flrepL dbl gar. In pr"Oc<!1s o! L'Omp in· terior dei;.1ITT1tlng. Btst buy on the beach. $76,500 IN BAYCREST Opportunity for Imagination, this home needs a family that "thinks for themselves". Sunk- en llvtn' room, central atrlum, formal din· ing , Uruque exterior. Fix up value In the '80's. UNIQUE .HOMES REALTORS ~******************* General General HUNTINGTON BEACH FAVORnE ---------~- IGonorol Gener ii -;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; r\£'11· listing this \Veek in • popular East Hunti ngton CHARMING TOWNHOUSE -'" ....... a-to d>o1co shopping t'ent.eni and ea~ MOST POPULAR large 3 bedroom/dinin g 1111.lk to f'lementary ~hoot. room model, patio, double ga rage1 bltins. Stfo this one ..tory 4 clubhouse & 3 pool s. Best of all , no yard bed r o o 1n home "'ith work. Lo west priced big three at $24,300. be'autiful la.,.." and patio, Tle'\\'ly dro:n.ted thn1nut. LOW INTEREST LOAN Vaoant. Fee land. Prlm l •t only 131.0CX>. LOVELY, BRIGHT & CHEERFUL 3 bedroom I street. Present 53A 7o loan can be assun1ed, or home w/famil y roon1, on quiet tree lined ~ CO .. AT~ new fin ancing avail able. Askin g only $34,600. · WALLACE , 541).1151 · ~R!i~L 't:QRS -.. s .. 41,..-4141- 0pen Eves. (Open Evenings) Mesa Verde-1 2·Story $59, 900 : ~-?:" HERITAGE REALTORS. General General ---·-- J.}n,/a !)jfe , i\lajelltic 2 stocy 011 11 in<ling , I street of stalely homes. 4 r bedn:ioms hK"JudlfKC' vif'111 I master iruHr 1\;th ri1T'plal't', l!epll.l"l\te gur~t tncility 1rith t I 3rd bath, chilrh-ens 11·illJ( \ and maid11 qunrtcrs. Elegant MACNAB IRVINE THE EARLY BLUFFS Fron t row view ! Spacious 2BR 2 bath- DR & private dining patio. Secluded &ylvan setting. $67,500. Ron Sherman 64U235. (F21 Y - LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT AIR i;ONDITIONED quiet enjoyment & beauty. Swim & exercise in pr(vacy of your own INPOOR .pool. VIEW lbe color- fu l night panorama of 1urroundtilt CoQ>. munitfes . A one-of-a-kind 4BR + irtutni home. $149,000. Walter King 644-8200. (Fl!} SANT A ANA HEIGHTS EARTH TONES ... highlight the interior of ~1is 3 bdrm ., 2 bath home. Recent '"inn er of ~fame & Garden Tour . $69,900. To see, call Howard Wells PRESTl9E WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOI NTMENT Linda Isle Waterfront G_e_n_•_ra_I ______ I G_·n_•_•_ai______ Cus tom 4-bdrm .. 4112 bath home on lagoon. BY THE LAKE Fullr. equipped island kitchen, walerfr onl I ' living roon1, lormal dining. Goonnl'I kitcheft And huge fan1i ly roo111 opening to se- ' eluded rear grounds featur- . ing l~ gnrden pro.rndlse I and entertainers patio. Call 1-· Original sales model w/many extra fea- tures. Professionally landscaped, single story, 4BR, lg. FR, formal DR & break- fast area. $59,950. Jack Custer 64U235 • (F36) ( BAYFRONT CONDOMINIUM Three BR's .. three ba ths. Ove r 2,000 square .feet. Complete pri vacy. $149,000 Full Price. E . M. Vreeland BALBOA ISLE BAYFRONT Large home, 2 lots: pier & fl oat. 5 BR., den. bolJJJ playroom ; 5 ba. Sandy beach. Move In for summer. Excelle nt fi nancing. p17,000 , Russ Flynn LUXURIOUS BIG CANYON Beauillully decorated by Cannell & Chaffi n· 5 BR. residence. 3 Flieplaces. Good loca~ lion, with outstanding land scaping. $142,500. Pat Hug CAMEO SHORES BARGAIN Beautiful ocean view. Very large Ji\'ing rm. & nutr. bdnn. with parquet floors. Beamed celllnc•. 4 Bedrooms, 3 ba1hs. $119,500. Carol htµm 644-2011 S50 NEWPORT CENTIR DR., N.B, CASA DE SANTIAGO F.xccutlve hon1e! UJthnae In privacy & decor. Lovely garden~ provide ex11ulsltt! setting for uulqut• pool! Of· fered ot $M.500 In Sa n!n Ana's t l n e 11 t. re11ldenttal Rl'Cll. Walker &Lee 111a l 11tar 1 VANISHING BREED /.Jn NIGEL • DAll[Y & ASSUCIAfES • family room, billiard room ...... $245,000 BY THE LAKE BY Tl!E L.\11:;; I For Complete Information \'ou 11 ll l si ng a h<irrir iunc On All Home1 & Lots, Ple1se C1ll:• 11-hc11 you clisco1·.•r I his nl'11· 1 · ' "'"'""'"'· :: '-'· '· 1.n '' BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 1-"orcst honic. f.'pn•vi·r 1ir11 341 B1y1ld1 Dr., St1 lt1. 1, N.B. 675-6161 \\'ill ncV{?I' he 1;11Js1 111c1ed. llav(! your 01,·11 rluC'k .~ boat I '!'""'~!""'!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!I"'!"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"""' at yolsr door strp. f' L U s , _G_i_n_•_••_I ______ a.n.r1I c·Jub house & r1· ·1 ••111\onnl 1 · ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; fac!li •ic.s "1,h :.(1111· 11on1e Space Race?? 011 ,1cr's l\sSOt·. ()"" •t /)lecc Booniy 3 BR, 2 BA hOlllf' on of th<.• \\'titer~ G;;i.91U1. tree shadr.d corner lo!. (.)>lg, drps, bltns, privnl(' patio, 11\lrk l'lhl'ljJ! Clubho1111e & J11vln11ntnR pool n"ar by! S33,5(KJ -1011· 1!01\ n QI~! ! Cull til!t-/liOO. 1 VII!!'!!~ & C.O. I CAMEO HIGHLANDS \\'ilh 3 Pvt bcache1. You 11.re .,..·clc:ome to drop hy .~ see t'1i& 3 BR, 2 BA + fan1. nn. btauty at 4615 \r ayn.• Rd., Corona del ~1flr. Price $69,500. Call 83J.3,1.l;Q r"r app•t: LAGUNA HILLS IOI/I\ 1 I Ol \11\ ' I I I t >A GOLF COURSE VIEW , By Owner Iknu!lrull.Y d~rated, adult occupied J BR &: tamlly room ove1·looklna lake and S1nta Ana C.C. 2 Yten old. Brellflimklnsc ''IC\.\'. ritum: be Hen 10 lw-A ~llted. 0 11.,1«r l"lll'lll": rrca.. $62,500. 177 Th" 1\11 1t~rs Cil"Clt, C.M. 5jj'.(j.')'.l. -Trlp-=1.-x-:Fi=-x.-r- st1u1 your tstalc here? l\.fnsy bul IOWKI, 2 BR un itJ • ; paint, polhih Ind profit! Uoted at 139,900 • 10% do\\'11 or TR.ADE;!! Call $15-8400. NEW HOME-NEVER OCCUPIED Lovely Big Canyon condorninlum-3BR's, 3 baths. $107,500. Barbara Gothard 64U235 (F52) BLUFFS ON A BUDGET $52.500. 3BR home In low monthly main· tenance area. A Best Buyl Jack Howall 644-6200. (Fl7) LINDA ISLI Firs~ -oUer!ng. Custom home by Rulon Hodges, . designed by Herb Brownell., Warmth & charm prevail in the rich walnut & teak paneled LR, DR & FR. Lg. master suite w /flrep_Iac;e & dresoin& room. 2 fam- ily sl:r.e BR s + lg. work room. Will ace commodate lg. boat. '2S5,000.'Evelyn Gray 642-8235. (F"lll) • BARGAIN HUNTIR'S DBLIGHT Harbor 'View Carmel. Lovely 3BR/FR home near new elementary 'chool. Only '66,llOO fee. J oyce Edlund 6'2-8281. (F12)1 IN411HA"'"" 144·- NIWpllrl ... ch, Clllloml• l:ZIU " for. Action • • • Call 642-S&zt ( • • !ILOT·ADVERTISER W!!dntsday, A119us1 29, 1973 Wtdnesday, August iq, 1973 J ( -1•5~ J~ [ -~.. J~ [ _,,,,. j ~'I LI ~-~-.. ~]~i;!,~[;;;;;-..;;;;'";;;;'*~j~~l~I -~t·s.i.~JE~ I ~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~;;;~~~;;;;;;~~;;l1:.:~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;; 1... Huntlnt1on lle1ch I :.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiii I ~=~~~~;;;;;;;;;;~' J~!:::;;:;.::.:.. _____ ...;:.::::;:.:::_ _____ 1G_one __ ra~l;;;";;:;;;---l ·::;;;;;:;;~~~~;;;:;;=:,I Coron• del Mar Dini Point L1gune S..ch • Genoral I ' -""'"'.""."""'.""---:-.::-. THE BIG WHOPPER DUPLEX ISLAND CONDO· Old Corona del Mor >'lR Sale by ••™'" Xlnt H111<u 2,000 lkl ft wigle o<ory lH.E CORONA DEL MAR _"" .. PARADISE MINDED '• So. of h•y. Old<• ln1m1c. c~nd, 2 Bit, 2 UA, !nm r.m. w;th g;not J<OOI, 4 lledroomo, BIG STEAL °"""" Jldo ol hi8b'A'81 hofn~. big 49' lot, gorgeous v.1/w t·rpts, drp!l, 2 nuns I•' baths fonnkl dining convenit."frt to + Pool $42,500 TIIE 'PER.FEX:T \VAY TO gardem + rental. $89.500. J( fron1 nuu1na., S 3 8 , 0 0 0 · , ri::n1ty roOm w/firepl, oov'. V.A. No Down Pymt. beach A lhOWln& LIVE & .fORGE'J' POOL you're lucky at Denison 493-5029. t·i'l'd JN\tlo and 15' x ·lll' pool. Nt"S'tlec1 In I~ J!lll1, ON 3 Live ln one unit South Sea lsliu\d paradlM!. UPKEEP. HOME MAIN· Auoc. 673-7311 Fountiln Valle)' Lo\'£>ly al'f't1, too. $49,9'J.'>. LOTS O\TERLO()KJNG TllE and af'f the other Walk to Newport Beach. TENANCE, Bl.IT ENJOY ADORABLE duplex. So. of ----~:-:::::-:::::: CAU.. &47·35.i•I. OCEAN BELO\V. Detailed Eac..il with nreptace, : I Sweeping OOmtr grounds ntE SAF'ETY OF TI-IJS Hwy. Xlnl Joc:aUon. 2 br & NESTLED BEHlND HUGE OWNER tusllc tu-chltedurt, w/ex· !11ias:: C1U'J>el. O:xnp!etd)r . and swaying trees en1brace PRIVATE, PATROLLED den, 1 be. & 2 br, l ba apt PINES .t-.1-;UCALYP'T'US l1o1 T RANSFERRED terior of \\-dod, atu<X.'O, equipped kttchcm rambJ111g llilnnd h o Ille · NtEA. GORGEOUS 3 BR. & By owner. 673-4821 eve11, a rrunblmg 4 bodroo1n \Veathert."d ()edar shingle and convertible den sr,aciou11 lntC!rlnr. 2 4' DEN IN BL~Jr:"FS BEST 54&-8020, e_xt. 269, \\•eekday1. "Classlc'' home with a ~'\yllbcd to IJf'll ~~f''jtly 'ku~ rooflines, LGE. SUN Df..'CK $82,000 h de-ff"'way masll'r Aulte AREA. 'PRICED TO SELL SP\'GLAS.') flill's Beit Vu ht>avy shake roof, plutih iwni, •.. 1 111 !! c ~ ENCLOSED \\'111 1 \\'()OJ). HARBOR wllh 11rivate 1dl!lng: room, ~ .. ,\Sl' AT '$57,000. O\\M::R New <IBR, 2ir,.ba, ~p. dining carpets and unique llghth1g, !\\'V s101·y. 1h1s 11> the fa\~I · EN RAJLS, TH,\T AF· DO YOU BELIEVE NEWPORT BEACH? A private wooded lot on CHERRY LAKE in area of quiet, exclusive homes. Re serve for your PRIVACY now! Separate children's ,wing. MUfIT LEAVt~. R•n. ""'Carn1cl Boy Dr. By superbly equipped kitchen, !!e n\Ol'k:l,fa\vll/1: .. rorn11tl d!lhn• FORDS A SCENIC OCEAN GUEST FACILITY. E egunt PLEASE CALL ·"' niaster suite with private 1ng, huge n1 1J room \\'I 'v1 E\V. living room. Formal dining. S ~OOO owner. balh. loads of sq uar e \\'t..1 b11r. Pi:tccrl S;lS.450. \\'ell designed 3 BDRl\I. & Gourmet kitchen overlook· 67 ·~ footage. l·lwTy, 1o1wi"l Uu.1 at TurrH1c bu,v. LAt.L 963-5621. OJ::N & DlNlr-;G AH.EJ\ Ing magnlficent rear Costa Mesa $39,900. BKR. 962-5511. FIXER UPPER tk>0r plan, ~rviced by 2 grounds fl.'llturing patio, POOL HOME b.uths. Spacious formal lh·. deck, dressing rooms and S36.9"JO. t-.fESA DEL l\1AR -IMMEO. POSSESS. 4 ~lt'Oon1, 1% bath, la.mily rn1. \\ith pitched ce-illng & sparkling pool. OY.•tter hought Vacant 3 BR 2 BA, plush 3 BR, 2 Da. Conlp. ~r.. area and lrlh .. i1 lo 1hc rear of extensive use of i;-lass. The ocean view. l\tust sell 1asl shq,g, spotless m~e-in cond.. Jl(",V carpeot5. Fireplace. Uw.-hooSl:'. On <.1.J.l de sac den is a COZY RETREAT, :l;-=:::::0--~~~l!!~~; _____ .1 Cll.il &45-0003. oovet"e'd patio. i-h amunablc Shady yard, llteel, lov-ely No. Hunting-HAS All. \\rOOD PANELED Tt~~li loan. $262. pt!r n"K>. or S35 T.10 • 10'/fi 00\VN ton Beach area c}Osc to \\'ALLS, VAULTED OPEi.'l' NEAR HARBOR 10% dn. 28'18 Montmey. BALBOA BAY PROP. Gold<n ll'esl Coll...,, Hard. BEA'1 CEll.JSGS, MAS· * 556--8800 * ly any lawn care. $34.900. Sl\'E & ThlPOSINC STONE : G..,tral HI $29,900. llQOL · 5 Bl'drooms, \Voold be much 1nore if prop-FIREPLACE, fro1n floor to I Olli\ I L Ol \O\ ' ' * CORONA DEL MAR * 2 COLORFUL COTIAGES Rare offering of ocean side of the h\\'Y· prop- erty of two houses on one lot , live in one, have income from the other. First time Of· fered, at $89,500. "'t'll"UA"~ 3 baths, custorn frpk-.. quiet -------~· \\'as up to pnr. Cr\Ll.. i'l!"iling. Ft OPEN DAILY 1 to 5 no-traHic sl:rt'el . Custoin REPO 846-3377. Step~aver kitchen has AIJ.. 4000 Sq. • l ••• R di nd CM if&~-pool in huge private BUILT IN RANGE & OVEN, -0 a 5' • ' ~-l'· 1 ~. $750 DOWN 2 BA yard 1003 rVP>I ""at. v•"n· DTSli\VASHER. G. l)l~P .. Corona del Mar 4 &-droom comp er wiu carry 1st TD at S<;t 2 or 3 BR 1·0,\•nhouse, hge ETC., all w--·~d togethe .. painted in & out. l'k'\\' car-dbl ·•= ' For those v.·ho ap.....,.,·l&te 2 I t n1inimum closing costs. runlpus room e gar, in matching rok>r \O!IC'S. , .. ~-peting. R· ot. rm or !Ul· swim pool. few left. 1-lurry! rine euston1 ronstrucllon and o1hcr unit. Lrg Jot. Owner S2S.T;iO. MONTICELLO CON-$.t2-4<12l :)pacious, levrl ri>ar ~rnunrl~. exet'llent rern1s. 5 bed1"001ns-, "'ill help lina-re. 00 _ 3 Bedroom, l% bath, First Pionter Realty IDEAL FOR S\\IIM~UNG tan1ily 1'001n, lo1111nl dining e CALL ANYTIME e lush shag, $!92 per nio. pays POOL. TI1t> proJ)Crty is VA- 1oon1, lul'ge gun1e mo1n 646-3928 or Evt. 673-4577 all. 159 Yol'lcto1111, tigi1t on C,\f.,'T & IN A·l COND I- and a gl0t·ious 11<1.noran1k• the square. O\\TNER-s harp 3 br, F"/R 2 TION, w/w carpc!ing & ocean vic1v. ba, $2500 dn, 7<;~ VA assu1n, WE BUY HOMES custom drapes thruoul. Qf. PLUS $4.1 ,500. 1'1ESA VERDE • 4 UI pymnts $309., 833-1103; 1. Cash tor yo1ll' equl1y (ered for only, INVESTMENT I J COMl"ANY REALTORS SINCE 19-14 673-4400 .I "FIXER UPPER" ! Rrally only minor ,fhinglrl aftd T .L.C. are needed to mnke th~ fine four bedmon1 Har• OOr View home a line ,pta(."6 10 Jive. l<"'rf" land, good patios Md land;'IC:aping, On1Y STJ,000. Ca!i 6i5-7225. R~1noval of one non·structur-Bedroon1. 2 bath, fireplace. 55z..9503. 2. Will pick up hack paymts $52,500 FULL PRICE •J 1m11Hion expands the 1800 sq. t1. on <.'Ul·de-sac El Toro 3. No charge for appr. NO DOWN PYMT. GRANO OPENING gun1e room lo a full 24x26 street. Unique bll'nding ot ;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;:;;;;;~~~~ CALJ. US TO ELIGIBLE VETERANS. Newport Bay Towers ~ 644.7662 run11)lJ" roomAN.D -=,T=H=E=-"B'°L°'U=F"F"S"';;-' red clay tile floor i1·/b1ack • ILLS FOR AN ESTIMATE Entire loon balance payable I & 2 BEDROOJ\l ' CORBIN -MARTIN REALTORS Call Anytime ' \vrought iron dividers create ROLLING H NO \\'AM"ING $400 per n10 .. incl. int. at CONOO~llNill.1 HOt.IES '"l':;;;;::;;j""!!!!!!!!!!!!..,!!!!!!!!!!!!"";'=:iiii~~~~::=~:::=180',; flnanc:ing ('\l!Trnl ly On the patk overlooking tl1e a fabulous kitchen-ram/din Sharp 3 bedroom, 2 bath CASH NO\\I s~ % annual % rate for 29!; Buyfront lfomcs I Ii available at approx. Rlr!:(;c.. Back Bay h'Om ''The area. One of a kind. 6';'o home _ located on a large 842-9371 yrs Bf>at Slips • Gentral LA CUESTA VILLAS Top V!llUt> at $1.Xi,OOO. mutts." The ultimate in assumable loan, or lOo/o lot in a country-side setting. MISSION REAL TY Fu.JI Secu1i ty lfighri.!Jf" ! VERMONT CALL 644.7211 prestigious living. Iron gate cio-.>.'tl. 1653 Palau. Do not This 2 year old hon1e has 985 ~. Coost Hwy., La~na Steel&: conc~te construction entry to priva1e grounds and disturb tenant, call for ap-.upgraded shag crps, beaut Phont (714} 494-0731 Private &Ironies Availablt prior giant 2 Stol'Y. Secluded mas· pointment. red brick fpl, atrium olf 2 garage spaces per unit. FARM HOUSE to schooll 1 ier suite with private bal· M R I fm rm & kit plus a com· Great Value Roof top sundcck : Due to Credi! Rejectioruo! cony and bay vie\\'. Family Costa esa ta ty manding view of the nits. SNI. TrmH-e Garden Ho1!1e. I Unusual Oppo11unity to Pu~ den. Guest facility \\1th 3rd *SU.nl 1 * Best of all, anyone can Nl·ar oc-canhunt comn1un1ty. chase Bayfron1 Property ID l l. ACRE. REDUCED • Not a Condo or TO\\'tlhouse'liiii~~ii~iiii~~~ bath. Goutmet kitchen. For-After 6 Pl'\1, Call 5..l7-1617 assume the 101\'-interesl \'A Upgraded 2 bdrm, 2 bath Neo.vpoM Beach. 1 /l • You O\\·n The Land !' mal dining area. Large en-I ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' I loan "''total nKl pymts of \\ith den. \\'alk· to commu-310 Fernando Rd., N.B. ; MOVE IN NOW tertainers patlo viC'\\ing $267. $35,500 On tree Jlned street. Orn-nity center with tennis 6754551 9 0 TI1cse are single !anlily, com· I d ,., · CUSTOM BUJLT HO!l.fE & I Pro · · 20 $29, 5 nv1n ..... a11 hornes \\'ith 3 BH. * v ant * rol ing greeb n la\\'Tl an .i&lc"a1"·, On corner lot, CM Back Bay • COATS n1atic enl'I')' to ran1 si~e liv cou, "" pool cl.di ... 1non . LUXURY ' I . ac lllt'l'itlg !Ue Waters. · & 1111 \\'I l'llllSUfll dcs1gnffi >a .. 11: l;Ul1a1 e eve Optll('"lll Jn • • • ·~ . 2 BA . Jg ram rn1 -1v rm area, 4 Br. & 2 Ba upstuirs, h al sh ld 1 _ kitcht"ll \\'ill1 alt l>I1n!I · . 645-0303. !iv. rni, din. rm., kilcht'n, E fi.t~pl. 1\ dlsrinctively dif-I' is ai_-ea, 91 v ues · ou . , living; ~t~1c HiJ Rolling g1ttn ht\\'ng nnc front yard lan<18'.'apin~ "·ilh BAH. llAll_BOR • 4 &...Woon1 Fam., den & Bn downstairs. WAL LAC ferent \\'OOd 1x1neJeri social i;>ll\r in the near future. ocean view & over 2.000 sq. Slately lreeg surround pie· 'P ;nkle·'" _side >'ru·d fences, w'Hl rn1l1ily rn1 plus den. Lols of close! space. Lrg REAL TORS center W/8!w1d behind "·et $;£,,600. bric. 494-800.1. f t. at tu.'(ury living, on a 15 j ture111que Vern1o nt r "' (' ''''°' & l"'"' b l ..• tg 3 1 TARBELL l •-··-l d full d.''"'hed 2 car gar., .. •1'1:llllnLar. s · ,, coven , Citrus tree s . 962 ••54 ar, U.'( ~1ag crp , rg ~ ft. ial. l may t...:-Ju"¥ f•n-~ .. --. Old w o r ........ u ,_ away ~ BR I h d .... k .... •~ 1~1..: .. iu...........:: ~·hake & r-.Ussion tile n·10fs a stunc s l uW · Woodland Sehl d I 8 tr i ct. , 1ui.:e le we ya1,1 I \\'hat you've "'-"n >UU"'';l Charm and art'hltccture. " '"Ill U ''0 OO"'N TO I ~"""~'"!'!!!!!~~"!:"'!!!!!!~ I d · will · al • 't · k lb llf'ld ABOVE AU.. • BUILT ., se '~ "' $.~7,500 Owner 548-473:.! or I: a >Un Hill I !rop1c 1l'U1 fnr. \Vhy not pie· up ~=e~l 11~::~1')'~·i1~'tfh :~; HY AYRES!! VETS!$41,500 s:n.-'·H;;:u;";;'i:n:g:'":";;:Bl::•:c~h;;:~~I '.{c~~;u~'.'!_~clt~ d~~P~~~~~: ··~~~1~~!!:~~ r-.1i':1a1·~~ci:~~; I phone? $76,500. Man size den \\<i.lh ru~ged 1342 Sn. Ft. -from BAY VIEW "UICK SALE! I' CALL The nl'al Eia:tate rair Tl'1Tnce 4 Hr, ;;i; HK honie. ~,j/1110 1,,,,H beam" M•ld• •""'""'· l'\' $30,490 5 lllt.3 BA, ''"""' JO. AvaH ,. California Classic ~>i;.:15;1. All re<lwood .~ g I a" . VTO t-k-1 p TAVEltN KITCl1EN "'i\h s~. per ,vk or \\inter lease 0....1lCr"s request • Bring WOW SH It To Believt Custom E' I e i::-an c e S E ~:!~;n\'::;m~ 1 ~":~·: Conv•nfion•llO 1. Down Newport ·~~'Ci~c ~r~~~TIES ~~~ "?".:;:~~1~0~·~it~ 1111 ASSUMABLE ~\':;J:Z'"' Offeced a 1 REAL E TAT ·=~ -=di!:; ""'~~::: '::!"' :,!,!d'~'. ~t'r;;'.~.: at 67><112 or 5-18.m; ~~°"~.'°::;"'';:::i: oii',, ~.~of';,~~fo~i _ LOANS _ GRU:~.~.~LLIS <'.J.~~j" Gtenneyi~ s~ooJ£ patk> with outdoor fireplace 1-l untini,.'1on Beach. F•irview I ~B!!!a~lbo0!!1"'!'15"!1!!1n!!o~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' t'llrcd yard. O....·ner "ill helri Br. 2 Ba. plus fan11ly rn1. BEAT TIJE C 1 and B..B.Q. RED Bi\RN 2nd ·-S:W..1445 646.-1811 financ~. 136.9.XI. Ci\Ll. in<.iw:les an all glass k1tcht>n, IN'rERF..S'J' RATE I 2>i63 E.;,;i1~· .. d~I CARMEL MODEL slory in·law a!)llrtment, 2 ISLAND CHARM 5-Lj..8 124 SouthCo Realtors. <'allX!'lS & drapes, fully land-T\\'O -FOUR BDR,\13 SOlllf' I VIEW guei.t cottnges iu1d <.'OVeI'f'd 1 ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""I (anytime) 5 Br, 2 Ba, sin. play room + Wh W • !'Caped. including brick }oy,· 00\\'n "'"11'1 2nd. Others ---.-. ---. --Out!tandi.ng H.V. }lames; S dlll'ICf' pavillion m·erlooklng I 1"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ! •"iual un;t, 1 ,7. sunJC'Ck, too! 'T'I 1Y t 111t • R. •1• jllitio v.·ith cover. By apl as little as $4500. to assume. BEAliTI 0 :i; UI. oc 1 ean 900 v1ew lot lxtrms. family nn., Ju~ magnificent tree form pool. 1• Oit1 ,~·orld cliaini. Lots of 1 "trts a es only. 846-~~ aft. 6:00 pm. Priced as low as $2li,OOO. and . nly 13, gold Carpeting, decQntot ENTERTAINERS PARA· SOUTH EACH "'°'-"I, \'aultcd open beam Go Down?? l '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""l~T,~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'I up. Oceanv1ew Realty 673--8500 rlrapes. Valley vfe\l'. Fi~ OJSE. CAIJ.. &&5-0303. NEWPORT B Ii\". Ml\. \\'/balcony. Xlnt Asstune 67' Fl-IA on Eastside 1' $26,950 larwin rtalty inc. time offered. Si4,500. Fee I Olli\ I I Ol \O\ COAST CUSTOM BUILT l~•nd. ti.'; Topaz. SUG.OOO. 3 BR, 2 Ba home, lam rm, BRING YOUR POOLTABLE 968-4405 (24 hrs) Lido isie (you own 1he 1and)TI.N Built IJy rhe ov.·l"K!t'/buildcr to O\\llt.'I'. Gi:"-,..i60l frplc, high ~!'1!.r lge yd for this beaut. 2 BR condo. *COUNTRY CHARM* CORBI No.MAR , hls own hi~h standards. 3 on cul-de-sac. ~16. Brok-Bo 20· 20' 2 car -- 0 -S ORY--R It ~· ~661 PLAZA Lurgc l11.-..:hoon1s. fan11 Y Balboa Penin11oulai er. " bJrms x.tra cab-• 3 ·1 nus rm . x . TW T 3100 Sq. f'. fam•'ly l•'vab1'fit\'. te ors -·'' cnL'l. gar.. · • COUNTRY MANOR 4 BR/4 ba. Hu'~ !iv. rn1., -* BAYCREST * , roon1, fo tinW dining roon1. OWNER-popular "T" plun tncts shag crpls. Adlt occ. . " _ _, Tu.stefully deror11tL>d thruout. BA \"VJF;\V DL'PLEX l"K>me, ~iesa del Mar. 3 Lg. Fronis greenbelt & steps to . ._ .!n xln't nbrhood, ~c1~11 rec. rm., din. rm.; gAt~icn BY O\VNER. Elegant <.'US"lo~ Su1ier h\'O !iOtry 4 br/lonnal HcR''Y shake roof. Ww 2 BR. 2 fl,\, one year old. br w/dbl clo.'lt'Ul, 2 ba, 2 car "IXlOI RED C A R p ET hv rn1 "\\'/l\'OOd bu1TI1ng f•re· vie\\-11, DE' co r a.tor l'Oncl. built 4 BR + lrg, !"am Rm.i ,..·~1.rc.;R ~ BA YSHORES • dining & den. 1\\-o firepJ.acE'S niainl'C'IWM..'C landsc.-aping & 2 Ohle g:irages gar, new cptg !iv rm & mstr Reaitors 536-8R3G, pl, country ~le kil/ta.111 $152,500. 2 JI.taster BR + 2 lrplc 5 , • -\\'el har -penellng: & a t'OOlplt.'lely fenced ~ x 40 Agent • :i-1):-:ltll br, new Armstrong Solarian I ;i;;;:;;;;",;-;';;;.;:::::;~;;;;;;;:;.l rm, 4 Jrg BR 111c 2 master ' * $79,500 * Huge LR, F'orme.t Dr. O>m. $112,000 gorgeous lile Doors. Grl'al hl'llted pool. Built·in gall floor covering in kit Ideal \VANT 51h% money? O\Olce bdrm suites~! Country gar-Spanish lflyle hon1e on large pletely private 28' covered ' ne"' Jnndly home in BBQ. J>rtet"d ror tile Coron1 del Mair Joe. \Valk to all schls. Hunliilgton Beach location. den setting w/huge patio en. lot. 3 BR & den, open outdoor living area "·Uh lush ; "'""and 31=..,~vZii:~le~~,~~~ Snndpointc. markC'I ... $52,500 1----------$37,$00. 545--0'.ZiO. LgDR•. 23stofurytl' 5b~~s~ ~.~ hanced by the fragrance of beams, interesting fpl. Near land!5Caping. Ov.•ner \viii J C. F. Coleswortfly OCEAN VIEW ~~ to\\·ering pines. Sirle patios Lido tennis cL fill8IICC l't'sponsible buyer. 5 ""',. 1 oomi ... 5 l~lht ~,~~i~~ 1.JA ~ 0 .. ~~R.n ~Xldeon.uscov-e_J W!l8umab$45le 500F'HA& 5~% ~·, provide safe tricycle palhs LIDO REAL TY Principals only 645-7500 mans n \\'lu• pnva e "'"' 11 Realtors ~.t:O '-"'."U.IUU °"' _ _. ''.d Asking · owner \\u for 1>1.ay. Truly a family 3377 Via Lido. N'pt Beach .pl'O\ided. One of U\t' favorite Walker" Lee 10-/o DOWN patio, large feno...~'\I YIU . deal. 962--9650 hon1e! To delay means di!!-* 61•7300 * · ~al areag of Pi('f'l.'en U' Fight Inflation located near schools nnd -===="'7=="-'"'S ~ stan and enlt'rtall'IC'rs. You •IAL ,,,_..,, Drnmatic 3 BR, 2 BA home shopping, cement drovcway REP0 55t:SSiON appoi ntme'l'lt. ~.!'....,.,The -~~-~--~-- 'k . al , SI by "'"" nNM Grow your OY/n vegetables has v.·aJJed ptivat·y on street . 2 ,.,. ~•ag•, qui'et -1• . _, 1 1 . Rea.I Estate Fair . .J.)Q--.,1. Newport •-··h nilght IL e it SQ. IO\\'tl . ............,'" ho , d 1 "' .. -~ "'"""" :·or inlorn1nt1on a1K1 oca 10nl;..Oiiiiiii0iiiiiii;iiii0i'"" -I t all •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;m;I and o~·n your 0\\11 rne. side an spectacu ar ocean pi'n<.'. 011ty • Call fo• a~ A ho appcrintment on Y o qu -1 II b b akfast nook • • ,,-of t!:esc t 1IP. & ·1 mes. m ., \\'es! Feed your anl y 8 un-Vie\\"!! h'Om N' • point:nlC'tll f>G-5196, 545-815i. AXER UPPER PORTOFINO • H. Vu Hon1es icd Pf'Otipl>cls. ' • ISLAND dantly trom this producing fan1ily rm, Jiving rm. and Lur.::;ict · 1 y nra_ cliff Dr., Ope.n E\'£'8. &J&.rnt PRIVATE garden, plus fruit trees. At-mastrr suite. Carpcts/drps GORGEOUS ?ifesa Verde 5 KASADIAN Needs pnint and pull ~e 3 BR,"1'3~~.m::Use~~'. NEWPORT BEACH tractive 3 bedroom, 2 bath like nl'\\'. Lots of storage. Br., 3 ba.: 1800 Sq. ft. lfuge E 962.6644 weeds. Huge 2 story w/b1g available school opening. BY OWNER honlC v.·ith family room It Access to 3 pvt beaches. country ldtch, hltn. elec· Reel statt bonus nn & pool size yard. O\\"NER "ill finance resp. alk & Le dining area. New carpeting, Open Sat/Sun I-5, \\1ed/Fri tronic o\·en & BBQ. 150 yds. ASSUME F .H.A. Only $1750 dn. buy F $89 500 6#4448 w er e I Ll'8Ving 1trea. immediale OC· New noor in kitchen & bath. 4.7, 4733 Cortland Dr. to country club. J\lany cust. 4 BR., fan1ily rn1. Glen Mar. I' lTISerNe\\~ H.in.S Dr. \V E~=~':: .. ~'='~'~'~";:';==:::::'.'... i·upancy, 4 BR, 5 BA llL'<ury lnckised patio. Santa Ana in Cameo H ig h I ands . features. $75,000 fii7-S.196 Cul-de-sac sb·eet. near old ho '! d addre"' • Garoen Grove $11 ,500, 67:\.3177 co~ COTTAGE ·~ 500 ~EANFRONT * • 2 year me. 1• any e-do VA ""• beach, storesGE. M.,....,, · J62~4471 ( -•• ,,.) u•110• DUPLEX llL'(l', custom featul't's have school dii1tr1ct. No wn. Cl-f,\RMJNG vine covered 2 BR, covl'red patio, clouble ___ --• 4, units. Lg. sundeck F NANCING Ileen built into this out.stand· term!'ii. $l l.800. 637-91o1. single story duplex. South or gnrnge, \\'Ork.o;hop. Fn.1it ~ Dbl, ~e". WUI trade , 0°/o I Ing 1\1lte11.ron1 horne -t'US · highway on quiet dead-e nd trees. R-2 Lot. Bkr. f>-18-9721 120-1" Tustin Ave., N.B. BY OWNER 1BR 2BA La 1br inoome]n San Cle1nente I 81/l o;0 INTEREST lorn furniture & 1967 Crui.Ql'r streel. Units have large or 641-4670 RE,.\LTORS 642-46'23 Palnia by A:vres. $43,500. l or DQfla ?t. $125,000. hiclurled, E.~ceUrnf tcnns. \\'ood decks with permanenl rn=A'°'R"'M=!N:;:G,,..-3"'h"r:-, -c1"1'1-1>a"'. A&'i1n.1E 6% loan 1 rni. to mi to bch. 96.l-1713 BAL.,OA BAY PROP. n ldel\J sun1111cr/wtnter SZ79,000 .• i\lso available wi-vic1\' of canyon. 2nd floor frplc, nu p!lint, unfinished beach, 1500 sq. it. ~ stry,l;1=rv::;l::n::e~-~----*1 67~7420 * 'rental only 6 rlooMI to a (urnished. For info • call addition v.:ould have vie"' ol play rm, copper plunlbing, prufessional landscaping.I~~~~~~~~~;; C ONDO-CLASSIC--;,u,.er be-.:h. O.·n for pm!H 6T.\.n<2. bay. $12.000. Seller wm dbl gar lg fenced yd on SIJ.500 dtm, P & I $150.741• B or occupy for plensure. ~i7~7865 Broker. 642-2171 or quiet str'cet." 186 Flower St, move in today, $36,500. Ph. YOUNG AT HEART A5~~ 1 ~~ 3w~~1 ~ Only S-'4.500. · · Owner 548-0014 !J68.3563 w;n love Otis dru1hig mndo golf '°' particular people ot I~ f~~.nsi; ~~;nqsu::;:1' not MESA VERDE JUST LISTED • CORNER OUP.LEXh I* B\. O\\INER: Beautifully SUNKENRP. LC L40BVR.E 3 PBIT ·gr·i~ i!.:,re<T('Qt loc ,", .• on ~a~rmilies, yesterday's price. S45.000. · • · South of H"''Y· \Val to t e rlccorat<."d ii BR, lam m1, \V/F , n, ..... n ..... , ·a n. M ,,,,1 s., Quick, call Denison ,\.~ .• 1 CALL 644-nll RANCH STYLE beach front this charming 3 BA, ron1p \\•/l>ltins, flrepl Fam rm, Din rm, 71,~% VA 2 baths and a versatile den. 673--7311 I ' $ ~ 1 000 du pl"". 2 Bdrms. each. & 1~ pool. •fust ·-to app. loan, nr bch, $ 4 7 , 9 5 0 $32,500 makes it YoUI' very /Jn NI GEL GAILEY Ii, ASSOCIATES BEAUT RA!ffiL!NG 4 BR.. .. ' _ '" · • " ~' NEWPORT Cre.t Co n d o 2 BA'. one-stOl'Y hon1e. 3 bcdroon1s,. 2 full baths, ~ F'rplcs.; \Vhite pickel fence. Asking only $42,000. 557-1783 968--8273 Bkr. 00411. ••/spectacular panoramic Heavy shake root, f>ictur· patios & pnvate co1.n:-iyard. AM"oalRgoodGANbu>R·•EALTY BY 01\ner. 1~0 GI Joan, any 3 BR, din rm. lrpl, bltns. V1's1"on-view of Nev.'J)Ort Harbor. $2900 Total Down e91que lltriinn. Jrg nKld kttch, Also featured BII kitchen, 67, ,.59 one clln take over -3 br, 2 shag, 2 Ba, patio, pool. ten-l\1o\-e in inimed. 3 BR, family rm. beaut carpeting fireplAce Rnd clouble car 673-6642 ~ oo. upgraded crpt, nu nis. 5~~'/o $22,000. Ownr, formal dining rm. $2000. and JJr<lrtefint:. Spa.eious h"M gurage. Nice . quiet _area. DUPLEX-Corner Lot dclu.xe "''Bier sof1ner. Prin· 968-2218 d h•11 below niarl..-et price. Pri ' . Asminie 7~<;~ VA Lo.1n! Tr1m 4 OR, 2 llA Ranch Style, shake roof. hltns. 1 on quiet cul.de-sac cloee to Buyer has chotee of fnianc. :\1nt cond. 3BR, 2BA, + new cipa.ls onLY. 979-8866 CALIFORNIA hon1e lO'l-4 br. re I Pty. &.11).{0)g_ nt>1v regional rm.rk. im::. ~-L1 \\'cslc-liff Dr., open • 2BR, lBA. SCIO Poin...ettia, Q\\INER Anxious. Large 2 3 ba, pool, $53.500. By 2 BR & den, 2~~ Ba. Brand 546-SUO Optn Evta. eves. &.M>-ml. open 1-5. slory. 5 BR, huge FT. Try sppnt. only. 551-3834. Can new Plan 8 at Ne-.\'J)Ot1 hug• ram nn . decornt•, Walker· & Lee tres.h! Asking $37,950. Sub- mit any offtt? No loan l !!!!!!~~!!!!!!~';:~i';':"'"I·~:::::~'~'~"=;"~'~'~"~=:: •. ,.-, HERITAGE • • REALTORS /N~BJ;;Pt~~~s -NO DOWN-BIG FIVE Harbor View Homt1 and DUPLEXES VA Move in foe !Chool. Spa<;ou, in COSTA MESA hlmtly home, featuring 5 OPEN DAIL y bedrooms. 3 hashs, f11.n1lly Bright Tl('\\' 1ia.i11t & cnrpets, room w\1h fireplace & \\'f!'l Placenti• e t Wiison A truly lovely 1-onie 'vHh bar. Eating area ln lhe built- Orangc County Apartincnt J?:artlens beau I I f u I on In el<.>elrlc khdlen. plu.!L sep- Exclu11ive Agent 5'17-6791 lree-shti.ded i(lne, 0 n 1 Y 11rate (om1al dlntng room . • * DANA POINT * S27.500. 'C•n· ga....,. !tin""' "'"~' Ii 11CCluded, oc..-an front N'duMion of $2,000 · llO\v eatnte Oil the vtcy tip of $84,500 -onrl not IC'!lSChold. ht•tortc onna Po1n1. 3 Rn.~ 1 Walker & Le'e 11y R111>'t. plcnse. • 3 ba. span;•h home on 1£>, C. F. Coleswonhy n I I -., flllO •IAl l l l All • n)(I °'¥!· ........ Rtaltor1 640-0020 TURNER ASSOC. r.<&.OO'n ioo N. "4M.1'/7i" Lagunn I ~*~P~E~N~1N~s~u~L-:A~P==T~*:-l_.,vvAA:sS:2Z:2f.,ssoOioO-:.:- ,~..., .... YCRE"ST;-*;--3 B<lnn., 2 bath home im-NO MORE * Diil nwc. cond. 2 Pat li0 g . No clo8lna: CO!!\Jt -no <lown 3 ON A BUDGET Blt·ins. \Vnlk 10 bc11.ch & hr In good Santa Ann ru-e;1 e 4 BR.., 3 bn. family 00)". $79,51).') llfJ!tip oo a tgc. ~·ell lor11ted Call : 673-3663 673-6688 £\'f.I. lol. Owner ia ieavlnv town & baa priced the hon1e tor qu lck·M lo. $69.T:iO. CORBIN-MARTIN ealtori · 644.7662 llEACH DUPLEX* Block to Woltlr en.I cutle! I I: 2 lltlnns. Ideal home & Income. ONLY ~!JOO YWOOO REAL TY * Ml-1290 * s1 f'e~lt1 ~ JUI( a PMne l w ,. &.IW678. associated RRO~I P ~-qf~LTO qs 1t 1 ~ W Sa!boc 1>71 ll>tl Walker &Lee •••\ .. ,,,,. RUSTIC 1 Br in CdM on R-2 S.18,00J. Broker, 546-'17S'9. assume VA. REALTY Oest in Newport. These lot. $45,000. Principals only. O\VNER. 3 Br, 2 Ba. frp\c, BEACH Cottage 2 Br. patio, A Company \\'1th Vision homes are selling for By ()lvner. 673-4169. screened palio on large lot. boat gate, carpet & drapes Univ. l'ark Center, Irvine S68,9$. I will ae<:ept le~. CliHisilied Ads . . .6-12--5678 $26,000. ~32--5.524 . hy owner 536--0256 Call AI1)1ime, 500-7'500 Cal.I me at fn4l 968-9177. ~~~~~=i:~~~2====:====~"=:==~===:::c1 Offiee hount 8 AM to 8 "" 60' D.W. BAYFRONT Ro?"'uet club 3 bt co111pletefy Pier & Sli P!S to 70'. 3 Br. 3 B11. "" + gttfst. Not.bing like ll for upgl'Jldt..>d & lu sh dec:or ill' $165,000. Call D e n t s o n prime 11rea -to sec 11 is to Assoc. 61"3-7311 LOVE IT! $4600 dOYln, 1---=a'L'U"F"'F"°S.--- Walker &Lee Ill Al lllAf1 BY 0\\1\er 3 Br, 2~ Ba, over. looking bay. S6i,500. 416 Vista Parada. 644-USO. DOVER SHORES 5 Bedroom, 4 Bath, living room, dining room & den. Super pool, Automatic gar- age, sprinklers &: llghtiJll. $139,000. 1315 Santiago Dr., N.B. Ay Owner, &15-827t. Prindpab only. BEACH DUPLEX -hard fo find4BR.28A +3BR,2 BA &: great loc. 673-5569. Newport Height. * 4 BDRMS. °*: 2-Story, custom built holf!E' with shake roof. 4 Bdrms., 2 ba. Lge. nu1tr, BR.: '.2 frplcs. 500 Sq. ti. recreatioo m1. Come see & bu?[! Sfi8,500 CALL Ci) '"'·14114 ~~~I Nt•r Ktwporl Poat Offlt~ VACANT -OCEAN \'IEW Great 2 Br. 2 Ba, 2 frpl~g, huge fan1 rnl, spl it-1e-.e1 home. Obie gar. lm!Dlld po~ion to cl ua Ii fi f.cl buyer. 10• t dn. l\tust .ell quick. Only $64.~. Call Brkr for npp'l. 64~ .ASSUi\·IE 7' f VA 3 BR, 2 BA, r um Rm, fp , on cul-df'· sac, S.15,fXX) ~1514 .,-r 521-T.J60, no agts. • * LARGE, 2 BR house, nlC'C val'l1 $38,500. 642--7056 a tter 6 Pl\1. San Juen Cepistrano TRTPLEX San Juan Capi,11· traoo, Income $6900., laq:e lot for 4 to 6 additional units or 11!orage, $73,500., 492~. 125 I - D.lll Y PILOT Wt<!...s.r, A119us1 29, 1973 Pll0l-ADVEA1'1SER Jf '~1 .1 ----.;-~·'~-' 1· .... ---lt!J-iiiO;Ji [.~·.··~~--~'II~ Rul E.1tale 'Hou-l'umlshtd 300 HouM1 Unfvm. J06 Hou-Unfurn. Jl5 HoUMt Unfllm;f"' "5 'Ae!'; Nm.' , M!!i.,PY!I\· = •= ~ .-pt:·v.Ar.,i ~· __ _ Exch!np 112 Huntington -h 0.0.ral lrvl.,. Newport -II ' _Boiboa \11';,~ " -Nowf!"" llHcll COiia M...''~· :1 , ~. CU~M ~;· "'tw s~ril!?Pri~~~~d~ ADULTpuic,.liOn.tromaoU ' $LANDLORDS$ 3BR 2ba. LRG Bachelor, 1150 NQW. CHEERY 2 Br, upper ..... YEAllllY LEASES ·Dl&:1.b;1""-· Con"''p1P tc / a' ' lo~ !alt pine •--oc~•n -·-. •-~.-blue Pa-'n•, Le(, US cent< UR properti••-3 an" ............ 14?5 Retr••. UtU pd. Student d-k rar buUt •-· /d b PRIVAtl llACH ,,..... ' ' e "'' new at<lragc view. ·Bull"""'r ;~"" $39.500 20>~ .. ;:;~bilu h 0 ; e"". \Ve \\"Ork with You. FEE 2 " 2~ ba. • •• • • • $385/~ NOW~ Nice 2 n•· & den ti')IUI th; '\\'k-' Se"'t "'-i'o w J D)'' Seven.I 1 i 2 ~br tn.lla/ -1 APl.UV, -"'I, HTS, '. llMd It awning. Xlnt. cond, .. ,.. ... FREE. Miuv atenU. Call BR, 2 ba1 den, AIC ••• $21a 1:....""-,H,... _:-U '•• 1~..! ft ":.t.1: o-l5. cab&nu AdldU onl.. Brok A1r Cond ... J'l1)lt: I i S SWbn-~!~ ~~ f~~il~~Pk~1fil ~~{n~=e~0~.&j !:JW[1~1~u~~~ :e~~~ prior to vamfrs&ve $\1 ~DR. 2\i oa ........... $\175 .gy•;a3~b;Aa~ 1U£Cro !1°~ Mt~~~ :fi tt. ~ .. · '¥·, • 1 ~:~ta ·~¥&~s,a · w. Bay, CM RMI Est•~ W•n~• ll4 5.16-1615 or 518-2lll 1-4 PM. $ALA RE ALS $ 3 ::·; ::::::· tam rm. ~ ftp!, bltns, rel, patio.' ' su..5766 ' -BALBOA Bay Club llml !ff!:i!!. 'i:'~ · !Jym and -,. ,.., es BR.-FURNISHED Newport & Bay, CM64H383 -.......... -NEW 3 br 2 lull ba '185. 2 WINTER OR Y~ARLY-Wll...iroo~ 2Br,20., out.'. lBa~~ ilSI I ~~~n~~~ ~,~:: -* CLIENT * -"•heh, nice yd, ftp!< pado. LANDLORDS' l =~· ~ i'::.'"' .i;.·~". r~ ""· !ml, all appl'•-Now. ' Ull>, c.,,.,t, ' Br, den. 2 le ... mlo .. mo. 11000 mo. 1 BR ... Den Frolli $1!0 patio & sheds. Jn Bayside wishes to purehnse dl11tres.aed Watt'T' pd. $265/mo. ~5SIO • . v·' • . .. ALA Rent•ls 66al3 BA. 54l-S486. Att 6 PM call 2 BR tzom S21D ~. N.B. $13,501. Ph: properties, hoOJell or im.'On1c l-"°":..::!>16-0l25:::.==·-----\~r.~m!ndefMa~~ 1s1on-$210 -Nice 2 BR, bltna, gar, *m.-3245* ~S-0000 EXT 11.S. Priv po/ 2 BR. 1\VnJ}llla'~ $250 6.19-2126. units for the purpose of i: ~a. Our Rentul St>r-patio, 1 blk. beach! DELUXE 2 Br. GIJ'lllt, yee.r. ON Tiie Beach -2 Blt tum MEDITERRANEAN 2 BR in exelostve adult .... ..:a., renovatlni &: re-selling. For LagulUI ... d'li .-vi . FllEE ·y d $3.23 -3 BR, 2 BA.· trplc, ly. $300 mo. 10\ver unit wJwuh«-6: ffi v. beach, boat 71"p, info call 545-8424 SouthCo N:v1:w! to OU! Try re h·111 bJ.tns. a:ar. yard. \Vt..'Stcliff. •675-3063* dryer. All util pd. $325/mo. VILLAGE ' ~ cunt. 1 1 lnve-stment Co .. Realtors. $15.5 -Util Pd. ~antront $450 New & nice 4 BR. Avail Sept 8th -June lat 0500 ~·.~!8uSebh0 ouae HOME 4 . 1 S Bach. Beaut. view. NU-VIEW RENTALS 1 .... ic-1 house octan D .. i DF:LUXE 2 B:r, '2 Ba. paflo, 645-8569 ' 2o100 H&rbar Blvd., Cl.\. ' • VI""""' /tease. or uruts n an $185 • Util Pd Nicely tum l 613-4030 °" 4~324! ..... • • '"r""'" Yrly $31S/mo. amdecic:, • cn4) 567-8020 SxlS MOBILE hon>e, space Clemente. Dana Point. or BR. 2 bltt. ,,;,ach! -· Balboa lslend REALTY 'l:u.VIEW RENTALS garage, t Or, llOO. G'IS-8183. OCEANFRONT OPEN EVR:RYDAY rent $47.50 327 \Vi190n St., ~plstra~. llave S3>.00J lot $300 -Util Pd. Roomy 2 Br. A Company "'I th \rl.sion 673-4030 or $3248 BalbH Peftln..,la YEARLY & WINTER lloun: Fri·Turs IM >,... SpKe 38. CM. 642-786l. ~d..+Fltntc-'·~~llena44 Fr PI c, Yard, pat Io, GREAT 1 br W/""Uo .,=, Univ, Park Center, Irvine 3 Br, 2 ha, frplc, Wash/dryr, Wed. A Thurs. 1().1 ' ....... ~ 'lllM' as uuw,.. child/pet. r-... ~ c Sant• AM ffelahto .,. WEEK • ·--~ I '••••••••••! Panorama Dr., Arcadia NU-VIEW RENTALS F'rplc, CJD; utll pdJ\\1ov.·! all Anytime, 552.7500 :r: .-•UP vt-"'"· CRAND OPENING , r' I' 91000 67J..m0 or 494-3248 ESTRADA~ br 1% ba ~240. 2 Offil'e hours ij AM to 8 PM ~~ ACRE, hone con-all. 2 • Sleeptna Room.a \VINTER Rental 2 br, 2 ba. PRI~ CASA .APT.S : l .... E l ~ \VANTED Residential Lot patlo8, trpl, fncd, 2 gar. BR. l BA, $250 mo. e Housekeeplna Rooms Modem, prl. pat\o, $250. per lm'Plaeentit.IA~ CM 1 ,.____!_,bte.. DEUGHTFUL Vacant 4 Br, NR. Ferry -3 br/2 ba $375. References re q u l red. e 0ce'1t ·View Aptl mo. 673-1657 \Y ken d a; AU. UTII .l'T'IF.$ ·pAIO I J:-iiiiii-ii~ _ ~ tpayo ~.·callft. 1~t 61;~ 3 Ba pool home. Ref's. Nlee, appls, trpJ, etc/gar. YES, WE HAVE RENTALS 5;;7-0338 BALBOA INN 213-283-5703 weekdays. Family t.Jqil$1 _ Children • II Sep t -Nov . 0 w n I A gt 4 BR, 2 BA $425. App1i's. May y,~ be o_r servk.--e 105 M 1 stree W l Larp 2 B:R, l Ac 5.%-6441. 494--0451 Frpl, child/pct ok. NOW. m !IOlvuig San Clemente ·an t $35 & Up. l BR., 2 BR & BAe ~tfte. ~-'" . 1, '"r for Hie 150 ••••••••• ,-:=:=:,;:-=;..,.,-,,--,-,-~~ ALA Rentals 642-8383 Your housing need•! ' '15-8740 Baehelon. Color TV, maid . ~ w.U... -·whn, bUns, II 1 BR. furn. hse, ideal for ==""'c;c=-=:..:::.:.::1 .From $.'ll54450 . $350 mo. Beaut hill top borne \VINTER Lease. (2) • 2 Br aerv, pool. The Mesa, 415 N. patlol:, wdrp In .._cloee'"-o• car, 1 1 ~.9 ACRESit_Sisldyou Coty nr. salaried bachelor, 8' frplc. YEARLY irg, gorgeous, ex-In $60,000 neighborhood, 1 or 2 ba. Elec. bltns, pvi Ne\\'J)Ort BJ., N.B. 646-8681. crpts, 1 • P 0 L · I' ·L<\ke. Ca.lb $7500. 'fem1s II •I No pets. $170, 494-8170 eves. ecutlve home 3 Br, 3 Ba view ot ocean, harbor & pat. Mature adlta. $175-$195. OCEANFRONT 2 Br, 2 Ba. Sm-$230/~fOi 1;1 ~ 0~ Balnr> ,,!10 ~cl 7<,1i 1 :~iiiiijjj-iiiiijiiiiijiiiiijiiiiij~iiiiij~ IS..:.:;•:;l::h-=L::a!.gu::n:::•:____ Fain rm, intercom, 2 frplcs, hilla. 3 Br 2 Ba. built in 615-5394. Crpts, drps, retrl,g, \\'Sr, Cal~Ji·~=te 11 ,. 'l=-.i\M1 steps to Bay $750 mo kitchen inc. rebig. \Vater & dryer. $375. Avail Sept 15.1-----~~=- , 2 BEDROOM & Den. Ooean 673-0002 gardener inc. ln4l 613-M!O winter !Z!ll 28&-551i or 6'6-l138. _E p:.: .... : ••~--!·;: Commercl•f Buslneu View. Large deck, 1 block to VACANT ~OW! Lrg modem or (Z13) 64~ ........ v lftWMI I ' Property 151 0 I 200 beaeh. AU remodeled and 3BR, 2BA, can furnish, ''SINCE !"'"" ·""°~""""'--'=---1,;=~=~C...---OCEANFRONT, 2 B R' & 2 BR &..0.. .,_,,,_,_ - pportun ty _.. rated Del S350 1 6 'J'tU HouHS furn.. or c,..Mn• dfll Mar decorator rum, winter or l "t"'•·u"''"""' I'' , ~eco . wee. year y, 75-0158 1st \\' U I 310 I I It n4 1130 • per month Sept. 15th thru . estern BanJc Bldg. n urn. year Y ren1a ava . : . ar p. •1 1 * 3-UNIT * MOBIL OIL CORP Jw>e uth. South Logwia. Boysho... D Umversity Pru-k, mline -'""'-"-'---...:.:..:.1 TEACHERS LOOKING 51&-7575 or 213, 651-7698 All UIUltles Paid ' I~ COMMERCIAL BLDG. H~ hl_fi1~1ll= =~~~ 213: 464-4686 eves. 21?: CORNER lot Lrg 2 8 ays 552a7000 Nlghts G :;e;n~er;•;';:;~~~;;;;;;IPrl~-v~ote~!2~be~, iC3dMD,~w!ntu;~er 2 BR upstairs, near beach & Pool ls Recreation id.-\\'ell located w/otf,str«t aales potential in the Ana-'721-5115 dayti. frpl., patio,· crptS, appt:l!!!!3!"B~R!!"'2~BA~~~l!!!!!b~I;;;;,~ ~ ren'tal. 67'l-ll21 or 833-1691. sto~. Utllpd.'Gar. Winter. Garage !or rent u ir; puking_ Owner will CWTy heim area. Paid training to ~L;;id;o;;;;;l•;;I•;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;. gardener. $385 yrly lease. , . • ..... c, tns, N'pt Beach, 3 BR, 2 ba. Un-BACH apt. Avail Sept. 4th. $185. 300 :«th St. NB. ltSt M.ple Ave. c.,,.. I ' T.D. ~.OCNJ. start immediately. Phone • 646-5430 cprts & drps, $295 per mo. turn. Yrly. $325. $150 per mo. Call 673-7245, SMALL. plush bachelor for NEW ADULT ~ING!'! -Sam Reddick, TI4-511-1381 * AVAIL NOW * . *Phone 837-9llS* CdM 3 BR, 2 ba., view. Furn. 67~ consecutive, older penon BACHELOR Unlti A 1 BR's · * 59'x29' LOT * days, n4-968-9244 eves & • Corona del Mar Lagu... Boaell $500 Mo/yearly. Cotta Mole $1SO mn. 645--4829 w/Lofto. Feplc'1, biam .., C·l ZONE \Vl'ekends. 5 BR. Lldo l.&le Home Penin. Pt. 3 BR, 2 be.. Unt. NICE t-: CLEAN 1 & 2 BR cell., patio & pool·, bltlni, &: I~ ~:OOY McC•rdr!°zR;:i~~s • Cocktail bar •1n11 down LI Dir R&e:l TY 5!ti;~~~ vi~wec of ~:r~ $~ ':i~e:f beach. S37S Mo/yearly. Casa de Oro ~,Fi A5•75=ta;..,..~vail Sept ~£'ifxt,.8N~Pe~~ to $225. y·, 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. •·Electronics s,;-':1Sales 3377 Via Lido, N'pt Beach city lites, ocean. 3 BR, 2','-SZO ·Mee 2 BR. ()(.'ean View ALL UTIL.tTIES··PAID ::r une. "'""""i.o 391 Hamilton C.f\-t. 541-7729 • Children'a Store -beach * 673-730G * Ba, fam rm. dble fplc cusi AJ;t. Bh-ins,,Huge deck. Compare befoN YoU nnt 2 br, 1-blk.ocean; patio fUS.4411 or~ ,;,~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""' e sweeping .serv. 68 accts epts/drps. Gardener, '$1200 $350 · NEAR New 4 + !am Castom destaned, featuring: $21.5 yrly; adult, ~' ALL.-ELECTRIC 1-r . Holl1nd Bus Sales 2 BR. 2 BA, FA beat, fplc, mo. Lease. Owner 644-2979 nn, b'plc, view, dbl gar • Spacloua kitchen wiUt in-1.28-46 St; shaa:: , 1 G D ME AL ON C-2 LOT 19,tm Sq. fl 645-4170 or 540-0008 db!e gar, washer/dryer, HARBOR \'iew Hi 11 s. Laguna Niguel, ' direct liaflting LRG l Br. 1 Ba. apt. l blk to OL D LJ , Newport Blvd. nr DeJ Mar. winter $340. 6i.r7879 _ Sp&ciol.ts 5 BR / den / Fam $400 •. 2 + Den, UrUque ·-• Separate din'I an!a Bay or ocean, yearly, $196 2 BR. Apt w/pa.tio, encl 'p.r, ,_Rea~, for devet. or can be NEW be ty ho 1 1 . ="='~~='="'"-"c----1 nn, pool. ·~tacul·-vu. channuut frplc home. Condominiums • Home-like storage mo. 61:>-4600 days. "'/storage & laund. faeil. .a.,· Id w/nN>'fe..t ~hie. $3.25 au l!i p or sae in SALE I..EASE Beaut hon1e ""~~ """' NU VIEW RENT U Iv •Pr! t 1•--Adlt ~ no t ~-r • •• N port n-h I t 6 • · l\lo. to l\lo. rentaJ $1150 with .. 1 ALS n rn. 320 va e pa MJ 2 BR cl.,. to -an t·-wtr s • · Pe 3 · ""i· tu Ownr!Jl,rla •642-Q590. st:on. ~fstfi. ow ren, 5 Br, 37' Iv. nn, patio & pool maint. Glt-23.59 673-4030 or 491_3248 . e Closed garage w/storage pct Avail ...... Se t "'"is $Ui5/,mo. . e)odY J.n. In __ ....__. _f..'-m•'•" Mo to L ' 240 6~1~~10' lot $1200 mo. ,..::=-==--'-"'-=::'...--TOP OF Newport Beaeh • Marble pWlman ... ~, .. ~•"""" r .P '521-""~ C.ht. &t&-0977 Or W.1.809. Vl-Olf1IU ney oan ·~ LRG. 3 BR, 2 ba home. THE \VORLD • King-sz Bdrtns ,6.l.) .....,.....,.MJ or Loen "7.i.JIJ :"for, .. 1. 160 1 CO "°'NT~EMP0~=-4"Br""", 3'"B=-.-.~trp~I. elEUtna, __ ';:,Pt''1 drpa.t NI ear ~N V2IEW.__lh,.,,.., 31 BRAND NEW e Pool -Barbeques -sur-II BLOCK to beach. l A 2 Wl~!__~E_?.J~ NA~SE2 's " st TD Loans bllns. Close to \1taler. $485 em. "4111.. yr y ease. 450. 'dvvm, llQ fle\Vly Lease \\Ith -.... to rounded \vith plush land-BR, i8fage, w l n t er. ,_, ...... """. _.. r, mo th w· ter 675-492l 644-001 for appt. _eoorated, new draperies, · , ' o.......,n, .PW'· scaping available Sept. 1. 673-6640 l~ii Ba, crpts, drpl. Pool. ' TilANSPED 4 n · 3 : ~ d Se RUSfIC 3 Br, 2 Ba home, ~place, family room, built .~:·3 ~~ty. Adu1ts. No Petl • 2, 3, 4 BR apta * Ma~ adults, no pets. ARTIS!' MtJSr LEA VE. Tai· UP TO 90% U:"iun~ $450.' en, pt. completely remodeled on 6#-.'l;Jt~'25.00 per month e 2 ear Garages LARGE l BR, $190 in hlk to beach, )U?ly O y n62.50LMO. entedJy ·deoora~ 3 BR 2nd JD L 675-7667 large corner lot. 400 . Avail.September 365 \V.Wilson M2-19n 673-6606or613-0.170 W3FountainWayEut t°"nhoose.sPoogroundsw/ 08ftS 3"-"'"lne. $425. 6T.l-l658 OCEAN v•ew ho..,, Beeut. NEWPORT CREST LOW WEEKLY RATES -( -Of~~;:~> beaut pool & bndscpg. Lots ,N:.:•:.:wci:po:::.;rl:..:;Ba;;:;;cec;:;h.;___ 5 BR., 3 Ba., cozy frpl, lge. 2 BR, 2 BA, dai (Arch SALES OFF1CE Executive Suites Apt. Unfurn. 365 o( trees, OL'eall breeze in lowest r•fes Or•nge Co. $ioo . Util Pd. Oceanfront fam. rm. 2 Car gar. $550 Beacl!. Hgts) home. Shag Phone 645-614l 2 BR. w/w aba,c ~.l djpe, ~~~a:;. =u:('\~: M2·~~r.l•r Mtg. ~ll Badlelor. Idea! student. Mo. 67~1010 Dally 1-5. C::f ·;;:i_n A~ rmif~t BLUFFS 3 Br, 2~ Ba. Ne"'ly 2080 C~=~:vcl, Balboa PenlMUll , ::tio. lul La~ ~:~ port Ba.Y. Priced 0 n1 y Servilig Harbor area 21 yrs. $250 · Util Pd. Secluded & Costa Meu SJ15 mo. 494-TI09. decorated, nu crpts. Wet 642-2611 3 BR. 2 BA. Oceanfront Con· gar. Mature adults onlJ'. No s~i·~;." Opo E DON'T BORROW-i~ 1 nr. trptc home, -Nl-CE--Ba-h--11_25 ___ 1_ 3beAROi ~IAingY 3UB~. 2 Ba, ~5. ~roS;.811 Sept. tst. STUDIOS & 1 BR'S ~~ n l u,n1, u""'1 •· B .~ blmoo a roundtchlld, .. ~S115/Park-Woemo ~ ~ -n ves. S:w5. 3 Br. completely redec. c -compete. am cei vmg rm, • FREE Linens' • ..,._, · .,.-. · • .,.,._.., •• J~I ' -... llool I~ I . I~[ ---_..,_ ' MollllelfoftM1 l'or Sale -125 ' O:~!i0~~!;~~~i1ty ~fu~r~.BelboaPenin. P~~~o~~~tilwri!o11br =· ~s1f1°f1~~1: TownhouHUnfurn. 335 =~i~~ea ~~~G duplex, 2 BR., S:~~~.~BA . '· tor-~~ good purpose. SeJ.v. NU.VIEW RENTALS STUDFuml$1452. Sngls ok. Own/Agt. ~L L•gun.11 Niguel e Heated Pool newly dee., adults only, bltrui, crpta, drpt, prlv r j.ng U}5 Angeles County for 673-4000 or 49+324S 0 br 11; ba $16.i. 3 AROI BA"\ _ Small e Latmdr,y Factlitita clo9e to ocean/b6yfahop&. patio, pool, conv. Joo. No 00~3°. Coyeru-aunty•.and NO\V in YEARLY hou•.• _en 1 a 1 ~~'~Br&-'°, IBlegeJ, . .,...,, English cottage, 3 BR .. 2 3 BR.· 2~S ba., in Sea TeIT. • TV le maid seJY avail. 6T~ or !)85...6822. peta. S165. 735 Joann' ,St . ., , HERITAGE . • REALTORS . _""""'"' ·~.., .-..... • . · • a ... ;-i. BA, frplc. $425/mo. Ref's. Good ocean view. Avail. • Phone Service BACHELOR to .2 Br. C.M. 64&-U50 • . "'"~ING Ocean View. 2 SIGNAL MORTGAGE CO. \v/gar. }l,J blks from ocean. Ftpl kids/pets tncd w gar own!•-•~"ISL 9/1 1 BR, 2 BA condos. New, (U4) 556-0100 2-sto...., house, completely ALA Rerit1li 642-1383 "'6'· ~ ,..,,·l,...°.,n yr. ease $380. ** WORKING WOMAN 55 monthly. lst & last. 4 UNITS Avail. 2 Br, crpts. Avail now. Open 33692 Blue 4500 Campus Drive, N.B. furn..,'.+. library. Tenant can EMERALD BAY, avail. mid .,.... .. v1-0. \\i.U aha.re 3RM furnished (213) 69'1--1496 W,.. bltna. Upper«" lower Laq_tern,, pana , Point, have summer rental. Avail 3 BR, 2 BA. iiv/din/fam Sept .. thur June. $850 mo. 2 Duplexes Furn. 345 apt. with same for % rent * 2 BR. 1\trn. Winter. Utll $150/mo. lit •-la.It + 1 $50 Montgomery R.E. 493-5881. $500 to $100,000 for OO\\'. $350 mo. 6Ta-870l rms, 2 patios, 2 car gar. BR, Priv. beach area & $65. Afo. plus ~ utilities lodd'd. $225/mo. Near dep. No peta. caII 5tl41J6 LAGUN H Business or personal needs Brand Nc\v. $385/mo Close facils. n4-£82-7030 Balbo• lslend (water furnished ). Not n.--~ .. ltr:i "'"""' orm.ti676oraee~A.Can- A ills, Leisure No collat -1 ,,, _ _, BEACH AREA. 9 mo. t So th Co Pl ~~-· ~ Dr ~" \Vorld N 3 BU La ei-"' req.....,~, 0 u ast aza. nr 3 BR home beaut patio deluxe but reasonable, )'Oil •• ~ - Reina:. ~33-73;6 • .., " Upon proof ot ablllty to pay lease -See to believe Bullocks. 992 Carnation. $250. mo' So. La ·=· LITn..E ISLE • winter to clean, comfortable and near Coron1 del Mir BRAND new 2 Bdnn. $225. 1 . 'this gorgeous 3 BR, CM. 675-0'171 499-3279 or 213-287~ ~110. "'/boat dock, 1.2x.24 Bay & Newport, C.M. no Open for YoW' loapectlon ~, ncc:>m• Property 166 lovely, furnished home VACANT 2 BR. $145, all L-umi HRI 1 LR, 2 BR. food bar, stereo lease, cleaning ftt or lit&: bet. 4 PM A6 Pl\I Wed. thN The Action Brokei· $37 G ~~~ welcome. 'Plus 3 BR -.-• tnu&lc c., gar. 2 adults. $2U. laat. SEE -afte"t 5PM, eYff Sun. at 301 &. 1'lh St. lst POSITIVE CASH Collect (ll ZIJ/386-7433 5. mo. A E. U'lV"3255 T eah 0 use $190/Singles. 3 673-5644 , or wk ends. Avail Sept. lST. ~-~ 1ifo. rent+ SlOOdepoeiL FLOW FROM A .-iiiiiioiiii.iiiiiiiiliiiiiiiii I 1 BR overlooks bay, Balboa. Agt. Ftt. 9~30 m!1!:8~. ba.~':i~~: j W~R Rental. Little Isle. 2079 Thurin No. 2. 'll_ , <>rt• IMMAC. 2 BR triplex on ~ SWIMMING POOL? 2ND Trust Deeds PlusBachelorunitsstarting NEW 3 Br townbome, nr Pool membership &i ~1blktobeac~2&:Den,2 $30WEEk&UP ... quiet street, aan,p. plut !\ This one is leased for $220 PRIVATE FUNDS • AVAit. ~~~taNewM port, SeHnaltgn.Bebh, pool. Ready for occup. Sept gardener incl.$25() Per mo. 1 BA. All elec. Jdtchen .. Large •Studio & l BR Apts. ON TEN ACRES J>!kg, bltns. carpetl:, drapes. ~ a mo. to 4-plex owners. In ......,.. esa, uo::-ac · 1st. $285. Jack. 979-1633 CAPRI Realty 644-752;; I patio, $275 w/util. Pri. pty. • TV & l\taid Service Avail , S200. 761. Scott Pl. Apt 2. addition, yoo get a tre-Any Amou"t Agt. Fee. 979-8430 4 BR lam f-.1 111. '--Owner, 125 Jade, 675-7817 • Phone Service -Htd Pool Apts. turn., unfurn. Lease 67J.-.8364 ' mendotls recree.tion room + * Call 675-4494 BKR. 2 BR Cottage, furn. $285 mo. ' rm, ... ., c, '13 ""· Li 3 • Childttn le "pet Section Fireplace I priv. patios. ,'-':.-0:~~~-~--•• (2) 3 Bdrm Apts. for only tor 9 mo's. Plum. 3210 Sea-Water pd. Please call do lale BR. 2 BA, all electric 2376 Newport Blvd .. CZ\1 Pools TtMls Con tnt'l Bkf!lt . l & 2 BR, 2BA. l l35" '165. '"7,500. The choice -M of M W ••• , CdM R dy Sept 893--0426 for appt. kitchen, frplc, patio &: BBQ. ~~"9755 o• ""3967 900 Sea Lane, CdM 644-2611 Crpta. drps. bltn. r'IN't & ..., .,.... • oney . anted .! ...,. view, · ea 15. Dini Point I.JDO lsJe, Lovely 4 BR, 3 Lease Sept-June. 638-8470 .,....,... • u-.r CM&cArth Cout li • oven. Covered carport. dole : I " I an ·apt. complex, this \\'On't KINGAARD R.E. &42-22'22. ----------! ba, den, we_ t bar, 2 car gar, or ~8831. (Ad good for SS on rent) . ur nr Y.'Y to shopa & beach. ....: .. .a..._ last long~ Owner will fi. PAY 10% int and 10 pt.s for / I -doo '"""""' nance at 8%. $20,000 loan. \Vil! pay $640. CHARMING BEAOI CLOSE to Dana Poi n I w e ecuvruc r opener, Balbo1 Peninsula HOLIDAY PLAZA OK. 830 O!nter St. 548-7900 Sparling Investment Corp. 833-3544 mo and assign well-secured CO'ITAGE Marina. New 3 Br. 2 Ba. SO yrds to pri bch, tennis DELUXE Spacious 1 BR. • • • • • • • • • I NE\VLY decot. 2 Br, 2 Ba $64,COO 1st TD as collateral. ~2 blk to ocean, \\'inter ren-. Ideal for adults or wn privl, immae cond. $.575 mo. 2 & 3 BR. Winter. $245 & tum. apt $140. Heated pool. e e e $215., 1 BR, $170. lncld's au ~~) k3~~~1c v a 11 e y ;~~~~!~BR-~d~~~~ ~-ii.)~.~ b1'~rh~t. a~~6 d;~ h~~~4 Ji;~· ~i£1e parking. Adutta, no ~T,A~fE~CH. deluxe. 3 B~. ~. 1f:1~ ~ ~~: Mortgages, BAYSHORES. Bay Vh!w. LEASE _ lBR. 2BA, beam :2::a:. & anytime on i New~ Be•ch 1965 Pomona Ave., C.M. i~'new ~us~ ;~~:.s:a~ C.M. . ~ Trust Deeds· 260 $400/~Can 548-623t* ceUing, shag, spotless. view M del Ma I 3 ROOMS, newly decorated. clng, view, patios. (pie, nr $1«1. UP. 2 Br,. 3 Br:;ik $370. Immed. o c c u p es• r , WINTER Lease, 2 BR furn, Behind Mesa Theatre. Bus shopping, no pets, $4.25 mo. Pool, bit-ins. play yard. LOVELY 4BR, ball, outs•'de 4=:96--07:...c_:.:67'------· bltins, crpts, drps, close to service. 1ilature lady, oo UndeeNew Mana•e-•'t -:: BEST Sch area, 4 B_r, 2 Ba, ocean &: bay. $250/mo. t ki dri kl • -shower, Bayfront. Winter Fountain Yaney ba. nuly decorated wide & Avail Sept l."ith. C & 11 !ii~· ~~~~r n ng 673-0960 Zll.2 Cbllege No. l 64Mi032 rental, 400 3Sth St 673-7860. out, lease $350 mo, or lease S'75-«>44. or 884-l858 or • • • • • • • 8 8 $175 -Lrg 2 BR, 2 BA,:nr. : NEW 4-PLEX If Brand new, Spanish motif, 3 1 BR. 2 ha. delu.xe unit \V/frplc., & 3 2-BR units ea. WELL SECURED SS.JOO, 2h(f "Trust Deed 9% . intette:t due 3 yrs1 Will dis-'°""' "40:ro y;eia 13%. SIGNAL MORTOAGE CO. NEWPORT Beach Winter IMMAC. 3 BR. 2 BA. family option. 4~173'1 or 833-1355 875--083! NEWLY decor. 2 BR, l;~ Ba, 1 frwya. Walk to td-.op. A: all Rental F\lrn 3 Br, or 2 Br. rm, bit-ins, !rplc. New i\tl . Vt 1 $200. 1 BR $190. lncld's gas F ~SH JE~tEwAPTAPr 4 seh!s.No pets. Avail Sept. apt 61:-i-2656 or 737-1078 decorating, crpts & drps. • 111on e O 3 BR. ;i blk off beach. &; Wtl'. Adulll, no pets. bor 3 Base., '" 1 · 6th. Ph: 540-6338. ldeftl loc 2 m· t so sun-deck. w~ar garage 64S-4095. 114 E. 20th St. r, • am rm.""-'' e cct. w/pal:io or sundeck. Eastside CostJ l\lesa nr. I Newport Hts. Buyer gets 1st user tax depreciation. Ask· lng SU0,00). Make clfer! (TI4l 556--0106 4500 Campu.<i Dr, N.B. _,__ \\f'INTE!lt 3 b Re2nwba fu-llyOcef an· Frwy. -$3lO/~~ 0 CS: l j FhoOR Lease -li3edBR1. 2AvaiBA,1 Yrly. Utils pd. 2U: SU-4890, C.M. • bltns, crpt/drps. $TJO per LRbl•~-3 BR1•127B5A1. crp1s, drp/ " ron , r, , um. 673-0062. • me never v n. 122 42nd St. NB mo. T.oo many e."tras to u ... , m o. 787 $350,:::·:::c:m:::Oc_-.;61;:"463'7::;7'-. --,= '-~i'-8A:2-;:;;;;:-;;;;:--;;u;J;"~3~-~!300~-~W~lr!:._£pd~-~83~7':-'!'1309~. STUDIO apt. tum. Person mention!! Call 673-6992 Shalimar. 551-6932 U no Houses Unfurn. 305 3 BR, 2 BA, 2 car gar., all HARBOR View Home YEARLY-Seashore by 51.!t. over 40. SUS/mo. 2191 answer, 645-4.512._ ~="-""""-'-""-'-...:.;;;; bltns, swim pool. kids OK, "M t .. 4 BR, 2 SBA-Lg 2 br, lmmed. occupancy. Hafbor mvd., CM across 2·BR. apta, froni $%10 to $300. 3 ROOM~ wiKi.mo. 1 1 .. :._ult like new, only $249 mo. No lea:. ego $42S/mo. Ca 1 j $300. 5.jg..}607/213-333--0852 from K-Mart, Space 19. , ~~ ':f.e'::fto:_ hoU&e}.;.. '"'30 over 35.· NO ~ ...... fee. Agent 842-44Zl 644-1077. OCEANFRONT nice upper 2 1 & 2 l:}R. J.rg, t16S & Sl!l>. '" 11 ';J'"\l;i W .,.. .... Huntlngt<ln BNCh N Br furn. Sepl. to June. $225. New crpt. ~'"m·g pool. $251)...2. BR, stove, frplc, vu, SI~~ Ave. lgq: i )f(I -· ~--~---·· -· ewport Beach mo Adults, 673-8367. Adults. Ideal for Bachelor. incld g tlec. Adults, no pel.!I. p ' " · ' ' ' LOVELY 3 BR HOME Duplexff Untum. 350 1993 Omrcb St. 548--9633 322 Heliotrope, Apt C, CdM RIME· Ille• Verde _.. - RENTALS on qw t ul • I t 3 · 2 BDRM, new·"""'· redec-""""'tall;s 2 BR ,w/p.r. _ e c ~.,.sac o, **WATERFRONT BR, ti> BA. .... Mature Bdulta. No pell. Apartmenls n t c e I y carpeted & New 2 BR, 2\.2 BA General Upstairs. orated. Poot. 1225/mo. $160/MO. 96&-ll55. , I' °CAl.L Q '"•'414 ~\WI' Houses Furnished ~-G --,"'n•c:r.;.11.c...:===-..:.:; , Near Newpo rl Po•I Offlrw DUPLEX 2·2 BR's Lrg yard. $35,900. AsSllme VA Loan. J 0 SEP H YEAGER REALTOR, 515--8625. COSTA MESA 4·plex $62,500 $640 Income pays prln, int. tax. Ins &-util. 10% dn, no pts. 673-8193 or 1-728-2749. Industrial Property 161 ** M·l ** COSTA MESA 63 x 300 FT. Unbelievably Beautiful Duploxes d. raped, dsbwshr & bit· Condo. Double garage 757 ShaUmar Dr., C.M. &73-3800 3 BR, H< Ba '1n 4-ptex.-""· VAL D'ISERE G rd -J d LRG. 3 BR, 2 BA duplex, * SHADY ELM0 POOL hi bu a en Apts. ms, sec u ed · r e a r and boat slip, $450. pvt. yrd. 1 child ok, bltra, · .r sc · 111• •iidps. $175. Adults . no pets. Flo\\<ers yard. $285. ~r mo. HERITAGE REAL-$195mo. 847-3541, Ask for •111AEdul. 22ndts ~CMde S~ .!!E;., ~~v-546-3226 or 549-42'15. ' everyy.•herc. Stream & NEW'PORT BEACJ-1 VlLLAG Cb J L" .,... ~ \\-atcrfall, 45' pool. Rec. $90 . Util Pd. Furn Bach. On E R AL ES. TORS 833-2560. ery unbert. SPACIOUS 2 Bdrm. apt .. in ~ or.t• $140.'UP. 2 Br: :r Br, 2 8a. Rm. Sauna.. Sgls 1·2 Bdnn., Beach. Ideal for student. TATE, 962-4471 ' B•ll•• Penln1UI• Mesa Verde area, older chld • Pool. Blt·lftl, play' yant. Furn-Unfum. from $142. $185 ·Furn. l BR. On Water. DECORATORS slmv place 3 BDRM, 2 Ba house OK $lM a mo 962-954! . • 1996 Maple Ave. • • .6C-3813 SEE IT: 2000 Parsons. Sm1 OOck. Yea.rty. All new inter, 2 story, frplc: Newport Shores area. Coi,n· OCEANFRONT~ 3 Br 3 * 1iiAn:ER .2 ' TOWNHOUSI 2 BR. 1% BA Dtx Studio. 642..a6'70. COSTA ~fESA 2 hr 1% ba stove refrtg n1un1ty pcol & tennis. Ba + Den &: dlshwuher. · . BR. No petll. 2 Br, tirepface, ipool, private $175 uW pd. Shag, pool.1918 $ OWNERS OF $ $150 · Cozy 1 BR. Encl gar \\'asher & d...;e,, Adu' It com: Gardener & util pd. $550/mo. Yearly. 673-5729 $120 util. pd. patios, •continental break· ~pie. 645-5$4.7, $ REAL PROP Stove/rctr, Olild ok. . n1unity. P~. cl ub house·, S375t_MO. 642-2563 or t BAYFRONT yrly leue, 2 646-l809. Wt. SpactOUI grouhda, near LRC. 3 BR; 2 B( upef4.il'11 1 E _RTY $ $185 . E/Bide 2 Br home. steps from shopping. Lease 645-4599. I BR, 2 BA, trplc, 2 yrs old. Huntlft910n 8elch shopping l tlQe bea,.ch. f 'Uf· ,c\'pfl, drpe.1t.rffb"l )ablt, nr'. \Ve re here ro serve you! Gar. Yard Jotr kids/pet. $225 mo 962-2913 or 534--JSOO TilE BLUFFS Pvt heh. $450 mo. 675-8'762. nished or untU.rnished, from OCC. $179. 557...()350 F~ Ca.J~Fp~°v~~an~ $~ ~:.eil::I~~~· JBR 2BA stove & dsh ~·ah cul SHARP N~\V 3 Br, pool & Dana Point BA~R4S,; FsR patios :!!°2su Cbrona del J\.lar, l.ARGE 2 Br, 2 Ba, a),ts Don t lose $$. Sa~ Tune. LAGUNA BEACH de sac fenced bk/yd % ml yard, m~ntenan~ L'llstom . trplc'I prlv rmaea ' ' drt>t-1 blthl. $170. No ~ i $.AL~ RENTALS $ $165. Block to bch, 1 Br, .-.; to heh. $265 mo o~er wil l crpts, & rps. $5 . per mo. PANORAMIC OCEAN VIEW Divided bath. &. loti oi lmBJI child. 540-972'l • N &: Bay ... ~ consider sale or lse opt ht & last &. deposit Xtra lrg 3 Br, less than l yr closets Re hall 1 BRANO new ta 2 Br t 2 BDJt • c>wport ·CM 642-8383 refr, yard for child/pct. PRINCIPALS ONLY. Cali &14-l846 evenlngs &: wknds. old, 'l'l' living rm •. bltn pool fables~· saun'a ':th: w/beam ceU~ bltna ap4 dltb~·hr~-iro =m: ~~'. Bal boll lsl•nd $250 • 2 Br. + din rm,.-trpl, before .10.Ut or aft 6PM HARBOR VIEW HOMES kitchen. Spectacular vtew o1 See for )IOUl'Jelf. 11301 tree top view. • O O y. mo. ~, · .• ~ yard for k1ds/pet. (n4l 552-8326 $575/per mo \\1th garde~. lights ~t pight px>. mo. Kee.lton Ln. (l' blk w. of Jasmine, $350. 673-1658 EXEC. Home .. Uttle lslarid. JiUNTINGTON BEACl:I $~UP. 3 & 4 Br. No lease 5BR. 3BA, plush, near pool• A9&-2895 ~... . . Beach, 1 blk N. of Slater). PRIVATE, mlifrt 1 b r * STUNNING l Br. Gtd!dtn f\'EW.PORT beach _ CUilom ;:~ N':'~ ~u~' ~ ~ S: ~~ Br. ~· cpt/drps, required. Others avail in ~clubhouse. lB60 Port Newport l•ach 84:>-7848 wJsml.li aun?ded..-Yearly' Ap~f;': ~ ~C.~«i. RI lot ,~,, f•-•·•e on 811 Scpt.,15--June li. Or $650 mo $285. 3 Br +. de)l. trplc, gv, Ori Cb'. Call Depl of ~f295w, 0~~~2<?' .......... Sept. 15· MEN, small beach hotel. No. ot Hwy. S190. per mo: ALL El-2 -~ 1 ~ ..... ._ l YI·t Ref k'ds/ I I Tran11port1.tlon ..• v•~ ··• NEWPORT'SFINEST Rooms$21.50per\vk.AptaAvaUScpt15th.6#-4064 ....... u,.. Plans for new bldg. RIVIERA REALTY 149 Beoedwoy, C.M. .IU-7807 ~ Eves. lots far Sale 170 Fain11ay of Big Canyon r Y e:ae. , 67J....439.I. BEA..,CONsng sR. ENTALS 2l'J/6a>-3.'310 from 9. 3 BIO Cal'\)'OQ - 5 Br .. 3 Ba 3 ,. $95 per· month. ·536--1006 3 BR 2-ba ·~~.11 .t'J"ULDahJ!a <:blld OK, $175 mo: See 120 Countey Club. Vlew of 3 BR, 3 BA hou,., Baytront. • wkdays. frple, stparate mruda rm. lilEACH' -0pe,', -· _,,, -Albert-No. 7; CM , ~~-.,, Prl'v'alandt• /i'aneoronaned Co~n~ Pier. Also 4 BR. 2 BA on * 645-0111 * VACANT 2 BR. 1145. all fenced, gardener ~ mo. BRAND NEW 3 BR, 2 BA, L19una ,luch 613-$:1°' to Bun 4-~ *BRAND NEW._Deluxe j Br 1r Grand Canal, $450 mo. each. FURN Bach 1100, nr .... _ -~I ~ Pl 3 BR 844-1444 Elec kit. W/w crpt'g, drps. . in trl~lu 1mo ! munlcy with i:uard gate. 9 1nos. lease, ~7762 Util ~. A"ail 00.,,_ ......, WV c»me. us . Year'" "~/Mo 1 BR apt, view close ln ...,,.."'-., 50 1 -1 · · -~....,., Priced to sell! Tenns "" ~ ... Te-a !l'o \I~ e. $190/Singles. HARBOR Highlands 3 br, 2 '-3• ........., • tlo UUls Pd $19 o .,...,........, • .., 1 ove, .. ~c, vu, « .. ,,,._I available. Pvt Pfy. &I04.\31. 8 1lboa Penihllll• 3 BR. only $100. SIV!I• ok. •Agt. Fee. 979-84311 i>A, yrly '"" $350 mo. Ca.ti 541-2119 ~i2:! or m-96b ' tncld32211r•liootlec . .\duAl"t'c"°CdpeflM. 3 BR l liBA,'l!p&clc>a, $!lit FncdJgar, CJD, kids/Pets, BRAND 3 br 2 be. 1 aft 6. 645--2204. Avall. Sept. · rope, P 1 • ·2286 , Canyon ~ ~ OIOJ.CE loeatJoq on Balboa CllA.RbUNG 21srt.~ t',~ BA 3 BR It Den, 2 Ba, $235. Clse lam+ l~~wnn. obi car vJf. 15th. DELUXE duple'x, near beaCh OCEAN _beflc.b ~nt, 2 BR, :t. BR., newiy decor. carp. 'Sept. bf. ~2222. .:.~ =~r. ~1 ~;l'Ei.-:. is_~~r.~lc~..Jfn bl~· t~ 4tiJ~· kids/peU/Cncd/gar. $».ice for wash/dryef. s.m BAY A Ocean View, 3 Br. 2 .biUdoblshopsd 3 B:; 2 ~ in,~·J:ioomo· 741 Ocean-drpl, bltns;~. $220 Mo. '2 BR apt near~ O>alt ~ ~~~ ocean &: Bay bchs. Adults. , 2 BA. $375. Slu~ts. mo. 536-4850. 536--lZn. Ba, carpel.JI, drapes, stave, e, ~{ !!hw • 1.,... • • yl'lf. llut. '1!112 Aifl'll COJlfl'! $110. UtUa P4i MD 6Sx.110 LOT. 1007 Comwt1.lt _m.ssos'---. --='-------rLA Re:f~i.· All .c:aa 3 BR., 2 BA. elec hltrus, frplc, refrir, wa11her A dryer, $400 ~t..e. y/mo. $ 3 5 0. Lido .... c .... Meu \--' LRnow, ~ ah.. I 1 I , Ne'l\'P"Jrt Beach. Nr. shop. 2 BR. t Ba hon1e, Ba,)• View crpts, ~. fncd Yr d · Call G'f3..7300 New custom duplex. t.Jpper 4 2 B~ 2 BA, bnck tpr)c, dbl G 2 BR.. cr;Ptl• ~ •j, ping. Or.-ner. 673--6293. Front, sailing. SW!mmlfl.IC, DO r u y.·ant to be near Bn)()ld'lurst & PncJtic Con.st. BLUFFS, 2 BR, 2BA charm, hr, 2 ba. Ba.yvw. '450 nlO gar, \Vlnter rental. $350 plut L.\ROE 2 Br, attached Pf'.!~i Pl!o.: ~ P ~ r. R enidi,.., F•rmt, t;oe.tlng._ 6'i'J..4438 or (213) Gra c & Hi-Schools, Shoi>-$290/mo. 213:691..a>c lflMlC, Condo. Pri oor vu, yr. Lo">er 3 br. 2 ba. $350 mo uttl. 613-1i.i93 alt 5 i>m. aartltt $145.....-21.78.__D ·• $1&.vJm. w1•_., ' • 0 _ 69M825 phi"K1 ~...,..,Bd & 11ea2eh:BaSee LEASE/option 3 Br 2 BA pool, !pie, avail now, 1465 yr. 54>-22ll. &14-245L N_....., .... L l'lacentlll.-!te'-5aLJDo5. SO.~ 17th-SI.~~ , -·-llO ' ' • nn.. "" h -•--.:,... mo' lae, ad!,., 640-0746, !l6.H1l8l •• ,.... • _,, ••~ ' ~-• 'BR 2 ~ "~ f: 3 BR. 2% BA New remod $.12!;/on Je.,., 64&-Im afttr omo. -~·" .. ,. · Duplu11, _ -. ~·-::::": t.... '•u_"::;J"' 00 ' ·, 10+. acee beautlful young l>W. $.105/MO. Win\ee. :Jai 6 pm call an 5 PM 842-3423 3 BR, 2 BA, pool, II blk bch, 355 QCF.;\llF80NT -2 BR du-e TIWPtCAL POOL e ~---- u ... avocado _ .. aolna Mont• r o . TI4/1J'19-51l91: E..mroE COTTAGE In 4 BDRM 21> balhs, tflO story l&mtly °'ZiJ:imo. Furn. or Unfum. t>le1<. Sept 1' -J\!n.i 1', 2 Br Studio, 111 &. Fe!>~ 2 BR, 1\1 BA. Qpll, ton lout yrt. Good .t ror 1...:11:;;3/335-4G96;.:.;;""'""'-~~-~-\\talkbw di•tance to shop-ln xlnt loc. $.150. Aak for B•lboa Peninsula lo'4'tr ... $250, upper -sm. 1ptral 1trcae. 'dXJ, ,ElaiCle blt-111i. Ntto l ' l'IHI )'ffr. :t-"enc.'t'd. US,IXIO. "\feed It &-fteRp'' Pina &_bus line OiA•ntr aa. ,8 Dflle 962--4471 LOVELY Jiarbor Vu.-4 bf, 2 642-6277 on lllth. MS-U6* AdWta .. No filtl. lll'< do•'ll, new-Fallbnlok. frOm -· to trn$h oo aini<le~ Sm per month. 3 Bil. 2 BA. Carpet•,-UClba, ~·~.}~;, ~.J"'.~'°15• Nr. 2 Bil. 1 BA. 212 30lh St., A .. 2, Bit 2 BA, oll bit-ins, near 2BR, !Be., ~sh/wlh, b!Un1, NEW ll!llCioal 2 Bf.~-.. 0-.""r 1!1!1ll carry Jllpen, 1\trn thern "into a&.Sh 20t3 W~stcllU Or., Open drapes. Large yard. No · ....,."4'C ~ ~ pm. nua.I $225. Ne•r markets. bay &. bea.cll-Avail. &ept J.S. enciM!_. pr, J cldld ok. No dro.pea, dlah/Jr'sh. , l 1..:.Prlne~:;il :!!.!~~·:,,cn::~:::::::::.---!-....;CALL::::::::..:Da=li._r~l'i:;lot::.. ___ E;;:V...;::::c..:&16-e.;::::.:.:11ll.=-c..Rl=1r.:.. _ pets. nn. 847--811' N"" a "Pad"f PlaAle &n ad! 644-(1388 eve .l -.OOL 1275-~~T.J. , pata. l1till mo.;c.Jl IM!;-lll9. pet ok. 54Wlll aft s.-_I , I I • ;of. ·..; ~ ,PllOT-AOVEllTlSU !r [ .. : .. -~-1~ i:~-~, .. ft. 1 ~ [ R-1~ 1 _ ... ~r ;.. ... __ 1aJ ,~r -· :..t;.""'''°"--~'~~r iiiiii; ..... ·""'-·Jon ;;;1~~~ r ---1~r -: Apt. """'"'-US Apt, Unfurnc • US ~ontols to Shore 430 Business -ltefttal 445 l'ound (frff ads) 550 Schools & Schools & Haul Ing >loin Wanted. M ii'= ··W-.Y, August 29, 1973 I . Wed..,.,.,., Augusl 29, 197J DAILY PILOT ... "'"'*'"*" )I I· · c il___ Instructions 575 Instructions 575 GET RID OF UNSIGHTI.Y -°"I .,.... N-rt leach * * I'\ WORKING FOR LEASE FEM. puppy, part cocker & ·---------------iii-TRASH & DEBRIS. $12 I WO" •N 5 II , • . either terrier or poodle. -..... COL.LEG ACCOUNTlN~ I N•w 1 & 2 IR E/skle · THE NEW '""' , w I share New storea or offlce1 will be Beige & bro\\'Il w/blk ...._... LOAD. E STU- ' . Call m-6488 eves. ;,•v\\'l'\n"' AP•6"'M:--s 3 RM furnished apt available in.a.bout 3 months. OV@rtones. Vic. Fountaln DENT. ~28. NCR"-t <>4" vvu ~~"' LI .. , with ••me for 1i.. r t Ideal Huntingto~ Bea ch Valley, liawthorne St. oU w Id y L•k TRASH HAULING .....,ra or • ·t I '1,~~IW2&38RE~ 'in Newport Beach are r"J: •n locationlnsti:oppmgcenter. Elli.JltBushard 962-2833. OU OU I e CAI\ACE CLEAN·UP I I. 1 Calf G75-6488 eves. m.dy, 1'h~ Nle1 oUice la ($65) & shore utllltlos. •"or Information call Jerry · • * JIM • "46--0!DI Major Newport !leaeh t1bJ! '! · 'opeq diitl)' from 10 AM to Water furnishtd. Not Gillespie REWARD -pert Siamese C'8t. needs exper. NCR...195 Pl"' " 2~~f apt for rent, erpt, $:~ P~I. MacArthur Blvd. deluxe but comfort• Village Real Eltate (Declawed) beige & white. To Work In A HouMCl••nlnt craror for AIR & A/P WbO I &: San JNl.quln Hill& ltood bl I bl 962--2456 or Eves, ~2974 An&. to llappy, Vic. or can t)IP(l 50 w.p.m. Soini& 1 J ' • I 8415-4512 . ~ . ' • c ••n, ,...ton. • LaPal l\11 lo VI . Su 1-IOUSE ot~ CLEAN formttl t.oducatlon In acc:l1UJl1· ', Dt £::= · 64;1·55.55 ,;;J near B11l & New· OFFICE on Newport Blvd. a, 58 11 eJO. n Steam Carpet cleaning , "'in. Ing "1>uld be dl?Blrab~. b · ' n1 """' i rt Bl d M S Avail on lease. Partially eve. Please call 837-6615 T I A ? do"'s &: floors, free e8t. • \; t · . , .. BA¢HELOR· APT. po v ., • • EE !uro. ""rpetro, alr/cond, FND' Blk tm1 puodte wlpur· rave gency &12-W-t. "'"•"' bene!ito. 1 ... OCEAN ylew, spacious, 2 lge • Near · 1hc , Ocean NC\v, -after 5PM av11 or wit 1>4U'king. Approx. 1000 sq. rt. pie collar & nea collar long • Please Call ~ ~. 2 Ba, new crpt11, & F\111, Security, ·p00i', Gym, ends. No l1as1, cl111n-$250/mo. Warehouse also tail Vic. lleil &. Gothard LITE Housekeeping, Chlld ,1_. Fle~- ·<1' , ~· dtJUng area, bltns &: SO.una, $180, Aik for Ing fff or tst & l•st. avail. Ideal for contractor. H.B. Care-One-t"·o ~·J> "·t-ek. 9::W.l2 N-;;,: 1 ' ''3~78 Sl90. 83T-3927 or M 0 aurectt, ~42. Av•ll Sept. IST.· 2079 54~2616 847-1525 Investigate Our Short Course Re[s. 832-6529 644-3389 II · " Thurln #2 NE\V bldg,. ocean vie"'· 2,0CO 3 to 4 MO kitten, orange Taught By Orenge County Tr•v•I DAY ~'Ol'k. cxperil"nced, ref THE IRVINE • 2 BDRM wltl1 Jots of grass . , ' f u A"-f rm ...... 1 htt fro Vi vicinity Harbor area. -~·•···'~ ' , ocw•N VIEW IVORKING sq. t ava , ......c per aq. t. Y""-0 -"' e nt -c Anents .. • • ···• '133* I .. ...., ---..,... ' lllllt build· ~ "·on1an ""OOld Brookhur:st St. 962-6683. Feml~t It Carnation. 1',ea • <>'~ COMPANY ! : ~ ~ ~~· 1l4·96S-356l, collec-.2~J4~ ~~~=~ !~~~.'~~~~~Ji'== lndu1trl11I R1nt.1 450 m.umean aft 6· 6T:>-423S or Class Convenes Sept. 18th Masonry Equal Oppor. Employtt 'Huilllngt•n loach area, l36S.· Ask for i<.,y, Vl•Jo area. 837--0913 after 6 FOUND' Aug. 12. Long 3 Nights A Week For 14 Wnks SLUMPS1'0NE, block "'"" • ~ ,' · -66-GM2. ' ;;P.,.m,,,.....,--.--=-...,--~~ NOW LEASING haired grey irtn~ cat, Planters, n1 a r b I e rn· -'Ir-' ¥-• 'M\ • . I ' VILLA YORBA S~\CLJFF l\tanor Apts. 1 G1r1191s for Rent 435 Huntlnt1ton ·Ba.ch flea l'Ollar; re<.-ent l\.1other; Call For Qualification :~~~~iilyEx';;[~d.ins~~: Alter 5 Pt.f By Appointment APTS. ~· Unfurn. $145. Pool. Ask ENOA>SED garage Joe ro,19 NEW M-1 ~ine ~=le h 0 mes. Interview NOW! 6~:>--!930 ' Civil F.nglneer $l8:K+ '1 ' lOOOO V1lla Yorba about'.'our discount plan. Pomona St. Cl'\1 $30 nlO. MO Sq. 1'"'t. &: UP ~lethoda & Procedures : 1, • 1~ Sanliun011n&t1 ....... oo ~~ch., So. on l52S flacentla Ave. NB. 833--0ln or s.18-6355 tramilton & Newland GRAY &: white Per5ian cat . Limited Enrollment P~inting & Analyst, S&L exp $12K+ uu -·y ···w~ S48r2682 644-0697 or 133..0519 • Red rhinestone collar. Vic. Paperhanging Conlrol Engr/BSEE to SUK Beach Blvd., 1 bllc. beyond ' · STORAGE garage. Del ifar '"'"""""~~"""~"""~~l'of Bayshores, Newport , p •f• T I S h I Digital Test Tech to Sil66 :Edl~r tu Slark, E. to LARGE 2 Br, 2 Ba. Gar. $3i(l St. Coeta l'\fesa. $2a. a nio. I' 548-~J GCI IC rave c 00 George Painting & 0 ('('(.l r'ng l\fcniory Test Tech to $866 ' Mal~ turn ~ .. ht. l mo;.7.}'~~~Y· Call; MS-.89U Call ~1S-09UI MISSION VIEJO FND Blk Lab n.1~-••• 6 to Interior ,iri E.'l(teriol' Conslr Secrel""" S750 ' 1114/••2' ~'21 or • .,..::..,., ' Office Ren111 "" ' _, -•• Son c·--· 440 1600 SQ .. FT. & UP. 8 mo. Vic Laguna. Nl~'Uel .~ 610 E. 17rh St. Guaran. Top Quality Prof. f'/C Bookkeepers to $750 ,..,..,.., AVAILABLE NOWI l\fontt..rey &y 77~50 ask Worlm1anship & Materials PC Brd Inspector to S'150 OFFICE SPACE ON SAN DIEGO FRWY. '°'Eddie Santa Ana 543-6596 I free"" 645-8616 Exec. Secrelarles to J1l50 , -HARBOUR VILLAGE, liun. • i tinrfDn H.a.rbour area, only NEW llU'ge 2 ah.. 1% ba, 71 2 & .J Br. on 2 acres. plus ear & shop, 314 A. Del I ·.A.(tult l Fam 1ecUon11. ,Ml\r, Quality extras. Adults, ' ~and nu. From $180. 4561 492-2264 2799'.! Camino Capistrano F'EM. PAINTING in C.r.1. in· Co1n putcr Opery:itor to $1"<>0 7200 sq, tt, nil or pru1, 8ingle Cl\lit.'O kitten 1 n 1 f xt r S all · b Legal Scc:retarics $700 offices or suiles. near 831·l600 Ne"·port llgts. Approx 6 (hta~lillled 1'6lJ ',~r e,ee · m JO . 8 A/PBkkeepc EDPto $650+ llell St. !46-3Ui6 or 1j;a&.5(176. • 1 San Juan Ceplstr•no H11.rtxir &: Ne\vport, Costa 4001 BIR(:H, NB mos. Green collar \\•/l>cll . . 9~1$s · J>"'ree est. J im. A 'R Cr & Col~ to Pl l\fesa 35c per sq. ft. i\lr. 2000, 2000, 3600 JJq. it, or com-642-5107 · Dictaphone Typ!st to ~ , 1 f 140 ·i.MI. N. ot lln~ Bch. • ~ bt, tn.I, cpla, drpa, pool, 2BR· condo, 1 ba, stove, Denver No. 293 -Phone Ix>. thereof. Avail: 10/1/73. tUUND German Shepherd No Wasting Journeyman Pnnter $600 S.1'-1501 Mr. Baumgardner, 541·5002. male, brown & black, vie. J[S] , ~ * WALLPAPER * Rcc.'t'pt/Typist to $515 -1 875' l\O space. Immed <N!-Plncentina & \Vilson, C.A1. I Lost Ind Found I ..,_.., ...... J \Vhen you call '"Mac" Ret."CpUonist S550 ~'UP 200 amp ~ phase Call 645-4374 . . . . 545-1444 eves. General Offlce to $475 ) Av.di. 700 Re.J°idolph, unit A: FND. Gray long hair cat 1 P!tOF. 'vall?We~ng .state ~~I T~,ff~~= play• yan.I, Caf1JOl1 I: lndry .rettia. ctJ)IS, drps. 2 miles • , tacU. Cple &: l lln child ok, f',\'ew l\tartna, $200 mo. ; 842-tOO.( alt ~: 30 pm. 49&-ru6 • ~/l\to.. Ooeanfro:nt + Bay South La•una • • VU. New dlx 2 Bt, 2 Ba con· .;.;;,=;...:;:::•,.;;..;;.;o.. ___ -• CM Call 540-3597 l.1o~Fri. ~·/v.'hite markings \Vearlng lie. no. 279514, 1ns1tt., al! , 1300 Sq ft Al-1. w/tront of· white flea collar. Vic of 20th Lost 555 Cement, Concrete types of paper. TI4: 842-4386 IRYJNE PERSC>NNS. • do, tun sec, fr pl . 213 -272-7178 : wknds t 71~1 l BR, l be.. yard $li5 + utll , , , tice. Lrg rear door. SUK> mo. & Tustin 64!'>-llr.! aft 5:30 •GENEROUS• CUSI'Oi\I Concrete \Vork. HJ-QUA!--ITY. LO\V S SER.YJCESM>~ yearly. 1't & laat mo's ad-646-5033 da y a, Ei.·es FND: Small ki1ten blk Remove asphalt drivcwys. State Lie. No. 28064.i wnee. 4~· M&-0681. 1191 Whlttler, Of \V/..,:hite Had pink collar Replace w/concrete 65c. ft. ... 542·1701 ... ~88.E. 17th St.fat Irvine)CM ' CHLLOREN OK ~2Br&3BR. i J59& $199. Opts, drps, closed P· l'aie· Near Beacti &: Slo.ter. Pool. ""' ... &n-:1546. Apt1,, I •oiiiOi -M-1. CORNER, 12 7 X 9 O' Vlc. Santa Ana & Beacon e REWARD e No delays. Free est. Walks, PROF. painter, honei.1 work, Suite 224 '42-1470 Furn. or Unfum. 370 PRESTIGE \\'/building. 991 \V. 19th SL , Npt Hg:hts. ~1914 slabs, patios. No job too reas. Inl/ext, . h-ec est. ~ 1f•• ..,,... ' ' !' WALK TO BEACH 1 4 2 BR. Crpt/drps, blt· 1 _ lna, aar. 30S 16th. ~ or 8"7-3a>7. 205 15th. 900-1749. 2 BR t\\nhlle w/trpl c, \\'Uher & dryer, bltins, crpt, drpt, $185. m o . 962-<11!16 OFFICES C.~t. $225. 642-3490. \VHITE female toy poodle sn1nll. 638-3325. Refs. 54S-2T:J9, &tz-3913. Cost• MeN Storano 455 aa'°"""bb !i~~ityM-~.~ For return or any lnfonro.· Contractor JNTER/Exter, accous. ceil· Fountain Valley, 1*autl· .:r: ~u:o. .,_ ~ v..., tiou leading to return of a In _, L' I I 'M!E EXCl'nNG ful new building, ground ' I f l l I gs spray....... IC, ns, oc. PAL ,. MESA APTS. floor 3 000 l<!uate 1 t STORAGE lot, locked yard. evenings. god our2 1 ehaf .cover P n, ·JACK Taulanc, repa i r, refs. Free est. 615--0809. m • ' ee • Boats, trlrs, etc. $7.50 mo. FEa.lALE cockapoo white dpprox. nc es in diameter, remod add. Lie B -1 J.tINUTES TO NPT. BCll. will divide lnto amaUer Neill Neon, Inc., 531-3374. Vic. Harbor Blvd., o.i: \Yith je"·eJed horseshoe in 269072.' ~ly \Vay Co. 547.(J030 Pla:.ter, PatCfl, Ra~ flJRN. OR UNFURN. offices. 50c per square !<Ar. 7240 alt 5. center; also, gold locket El I • p TCH PLASTERING * Unbellevably ·iaree apts, foot, includes carpets, 460 '"""' (was on chain), approx. the ec r1ca1 * A hUge pool, Jacur:i elect bJt. drapes, all utilities, janl. Rentals Wanted SIAMESE. altered male, size of a nickel, inscribed All types. Free estintates Ins, sha.g crpts, drps, .sawia tor service. Call Marilyn REl'ffiED gent 1 em a n Vic. Hartxir & Wilson. CM in S<T.pt, FLA. These are ELECI'RICIAN·Llcense No. Call f>.W..Q25. etc. Adults., .oo pets. Stovall (TI4) 83%-M40. desperately needs space 646-2337 deeply treasured family 233108. Small jobs, malnt & Plumbing SJNGl,.ES From $150 "''!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!!!! NOW in Adult Trailer Park FOUND -Set of keys -Vic. menientos & the loss is ir· repairs. 548-5203. ---~------ NE\V 2 BR, D/W, elttt 1 BEDRI\!. From $165 NEW OFFICES for a 12' x 52• witll porch & C.M. High School. replaceable. PLEASE, , Furniture L.R. OTIS PLU1'IBING ' fanie, drpa, 1ha~ crptJ, Nr 2 BEDRM. . From $185 AlH.PORT carport. Prefer C.M. area. 545-3a80 PLEASE help if JW have 1----------Ren1o<.'lels & Repairs. Water 1 ffuntlaston Harbour, Adlla, Unfum Apia ,A·.rail Fro1n $10 No lease req'd, full service, \VIII consider buying similar FOUND St. Bemllrd. Vic. of any inforruation • 6'12·3589 FURNITURE St r i Pp in g heatel'l!, disposals, furnace11, ! ' ao J>t;ta. $200 s.a&-4360 ~_!!S ~ -,,._,. , _ _,__ drps, cpts, mll!lc, air cond., with lease ot lot. 54&-0135. N. Co&ta Mesa. ca 11 Eves. & "'eekends. ~qf~~~s.~in~hem~~~· \V~l isJ~~·as~~p~~:~l~~~in&g· 2-St'ORY Villa Paclflc 2 BR .a.va re • ..g .. t; ""'~re 1u~· all util. Single offices from A.ft 6 PJ.1 or all day ~3663 \VEl1.1ARANER Pup, 9 mos l . ·ea. w/BA. ~BA d<m.'Jl, llv. Drtoedl 1561 Afe14 Dr. $125. mo. "'eekendf, DOG FINDERS SERVICE old female, needs rnedica-1 -892~-<38'3~~------Sen;ice. I , nn. din. nn. kit. wtbltns (5 bJb ~!'J,, ~rt Blvd.) PALISADE.Ci CENTER LA G 3 BR"-·--· tion. Has bro"'J\ leather col-PLUMBING REPAIR 1 Adulta. Brand new. 9684t97 .,..,...,._. 3l82 S. E. Bristol I Rb OoorE 2 ~ , .. ~J witlh IF YOU FIND OR LOSE A Jar . Lost in vie. of James G_a_rd_e_n_i_ng~-----No job too small ...P..AEVIEW...()P:ENING Newport Bel\ch 557 701.0 s a r e_,r Y coop e DOG please call 541·5965 St. in C.osta 1'te!i8..' Call · * * 642-3128 * 1t ;.-SBR.-SA. widen lrood loca-· . . (CAmpus-Irvlnc Int~) ~-,,..~r $»> mo. (2l3) TtGE'R -white Kitten. 3 645-7500 or 645-1850 MOW & EDGE Tll\1'S PWl\.ffilNG ' don nr ,..lhJ>K. Avail ~pt. A\\'llrd "'innllll 1, ! & 3 br BAYFRONT-0-FFICES .....,...,"'"" mos. old vie. El Toro '!!!!!~~!!!!i!!i!~~~ EXPERT & SERVICE AND REPAIR ;,. lit $275 mo. Call 968-6181 o.ptJ w/tam(ly nns. No 1 ~RE=SPO~-N-. -c-pl_•_w_t,"1-,-ml K-mart nea collar 586-45i5 ; DEPENDABLE DAl~Y PILOT ORANGE COAST'S leading : .. -. ....... 2 br 2 ha 2 lease. Sorey, no pet.. Fron1 Prestige offices overlooking 1 ild -~-•3 'BR ho • I I~ LO\VEST RATES 673-6578 r. l'i£>~ • • car gar, ]Ult $175. · OUR TO\\'N Balboa Bay tn Newport c 1 \\'cu•.,. v use FND· Fml t-Po · Servims -.d Repmn Call For Prompt, rk lac ; =-~ day5, 4!M-6JG4 ·Family Apta, .].2.;.o Adams Brach. Varioo11 lri7.e suites \\'/gar. & td· Under s~. \\<ht: older ~. ~i~i ~;;· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~-FrH Estim•te. Sewing/Altereti?nS Ma etp e J Ave. (Aaams nt Fo.irvieo,,·1, a11 lov.• rui: S12tl per mo. ln· S3l--0745• 495-fEZ'l. J.tar & Elden, ~f. 642-6357. 968-0812 EXPERIENCED Restyling 1 r l;Jt.G 2 Br, 11,i Ba, studk>. Co.ta Atesa. Phone 556--0lli6. eludes drps, crpt, utllifi~. GARAGE ln Newport Sch., FND Mal Chiba ha v· · & Alterations. Reasonable. ' -End pr, m~~ rou~e~ no * CA•• VICTORLI * junitorlaJ services. i\lonlhly C.d~t. Costa Mesa area. e u u ic Babysitting EXPERT • 963-5.'D) • t----------j• pets 1157 50lmo. W.¢\50 '31' 644.()788 Eves+ wknds. lTth &: ~~...ln Ci\3 1. JAPANESE , . . 1. 2 & 3 BR, F'um & Unf. or lease, 3700 Nc11·port Blvd., .,...,-OC);I BABYSlTl'lNG my home I Al tlo 642 5845 1 -EXTRA 1 --2 BR. 2 BA ~-.1...-':•a, '"-peg, D/W, TV l\'B. 67~12'l0. QUIET lxlch. below 20th for·1 --------~ GARDENING ttra n,._ --to -....rpe.. Ul"ll \VI p ~ L t 555 fenced yard -loving care Neat, accurate. 20 years evn. ~· Qlxpoolsideapt Nr. ~ach. ant. Pool. etc. 525 Victorin j *COSTA MESA* Jehovah I. l\Y .,,;,, uW OS 556-0855 !Complete Gardening Seivice A .. • • $WO. 2320 1-lorlda. 53&-5882. St. at' liatbot<, 0.1. 642-8970 ' Nl'"' otrtce bUUdlng . Th1'ef' incl, e\'es 642-00&J I ..........-LICENSED Bl\by..itter • '1y !'ree Estlmntes 546-0724 _!1l1vision Repair -.-LRG 2 BR. 11~ BA STUDIO, A»k llbout ~ove-ln '"on1 1iuile Rv11.H11Ul1? 700 sq I BR-retired ·~ady -no pet A!Y~n24~':o~~ve!a ~~':'m~~i:: home. Avail r.i'~ n . s ~\. Exp. Amer. Gardener I·,: 'e-!Jd gar, Want ~· no pets. • Allowa~ f'l. i\LSO 2,00'.l sq. ft. -nli "'ants \\'alk dist 1? church & gnrage In Costa f.1esa. A "Personal Care" 6'6-76:>1. · MaiJJI, Cleanup, Decor. Shrub SU'r.00/mo, 84~ EXTRA La;,f l or 2 Br. 01· run•f. :\II utilities, i·ani· shop perm' &12-00>9 substantial re\\•a-' is of· 1r· • -• & s t A ~ ~ I .. -•u BABYSITTING in my hon1e, im , LA11.1SCP prnk r COLOR TV Repair, expert, re·a!lonable; most IIl 'home. Free estimate, H.B. N.B. & C.M. Bert Galle~ore, 963-2783. I 1 * J Bit, 2 BA STUDIO. f!l)t""" ~ • .. 1vm 145. lor se1'\·ic.;o. 2706 Harbor feted for the retun1 of the C 0 5 1 a "I es a are a, Serv. 645-1930. , ~n.r6. M11.tutt family. Mature adults'. Want ok. No 81\'d. Robert Nath1'ss, JUtr. two \Vlnchester noes in· •• I ~ '"M '!on ro v I 64' 85 I 11 .... l References. 642--0384 JAPANESE Gardener, <'x· ' Avail now. 8''2.-0350 " .<001 " a · ~·14 , Announc:9rneftt 110lved. No question.a asked. '1 i.: 211-l"' ~ Co t t PA1 A' Serv' ?ofATURE, dependable, fcnc· per. Cleanups, yanl sei;v. I •·BR Studio, N@"A'. 1~.Bath. OCEAN VIEW n·~. ·-' 2689. IJ' tees, _ .. ·--1 M ho Rf tlella & nee.t Free est G·--2 bl'·· be h Call REDEC UNI" 2 Br/2 Ba S ., .,... ,,....... Y me. e J>. 64.:..,.,,;...1. · · Top Soil • -... ~. ... ac • • · • pacioua:. exec. office in Good lunches. 545-1007. ,,..,,.,.,. • att 5:30 ~. $215. FURN 2 Br/l~ Ba , U . Bank RE\VARD -part Siamese f DX!, 1 Br $190. Adults, no ruon Bldg., Nev:port Announcements 500 cat. (Occlawedl bei.-& *QUALITY * * l\tULOI & toP SOIL * ... ....,....._ H rbou llf E 20th St C~n1er \1t/rect'pt. are a, -~ ; i ::::::=r== • r ~ · · phone M'nice. Xerox &, part "''hite. Ans. to Happy. Vic. . thne M.'C.'Y. l\lr. l\lcJ>,adund , NE\V ta.lent, ~w mntt'!tlal of LaPala. 1'1isslon Viejo, 1"' FOR rmt or lease:, brand -...~-..-·•• &l4·S4.MJ. ~ed immediataly for ne9o· Sun eve. Please ea 11 • .: , oew 2BR Townhouse, B'Aim· .......,_..U' ... rad»0 show on KNAC. S.17.{i615 • ~ ntlrW pool Ir rec., else to 2 BR 1 BA 'furn ~,2'i!l LEASE -4 rm offi ce Singles. duos; Irias, groups.!;=;'="====;==== '1. ocean. Patio It very private. 2 BR 2 BA .. ~-i~ Bid C M ..,~ also for clul) \\'Ork & LOSI' female Si am es e 'f st ... --1a1 -" w uwn -tg, · · •-per mo. SRO /fie I · · It T •' "u iu a ..... ~-e, l."]Ul Perfect for arcbitectc::, o\'Prseas tour s. w a co or V1c1n Y erry I·· coll«t, 213: m-442'i aft 151 E..2ls:~"~" C..-\t. 'I Enterprises. 77l \V. 19,th St., &. Beach Blvd., H.B. (Ban- Tpm * &16~ * small mfg business, etc. COf1ta l\tesa,. 1n4l&u-89S3 bury AptsJ. 644-6169 or ' • L II x u R!OUS w•'""'""'' Huntlnfilon loach M-1 zone. AGT. 646-3255 I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ot7-9744. ! d:mdo. Prlv. boat s:Up at your BUSIEST intersection i n 1 ~ w=ST=-, -,,M"ts_m_ar....,.ke<f...,....,S"lam-e-,., , · docir. Speetacula't ma In I DELUXE Adwt Poolitlde Newport Harbor. Second ,..;.: 1 • 1 · kitten, 9 wks:. Needs 1 channel mw. Be au t . Garden Bungalow. N r . story in Unique llomes . medication. Vic. 40th & I decorated 2 BR 2 Ba ocean· TFrplc lrg Patio 6 Buil,11...... 800 f 1;iiiiijiiiiijiiiiijiiiiijiiiiijm;;' iiiiij;;;;~1 River, N.B. 67J..TI42 or ." 1 f-1c., .. tlo. Ra.:.:.-. $500 pools,' -· tenn is. ......,.. sq. I. at 675-4986 u.,. ·-~ 0~,, NII"-"' S350/mo.; 600 sq. tt. at ~~=·--~-~--, Mo., leate. M4-4223. ........_....,. $300/mo. Both with views. Personals S30 LOST 10 sp, Blue Dawes, ; ' RENT or lease new 2 Br l Bdrm. From Stri. 67>-6000. Schwinn, Vic. 17th & • • twnhte, shag crpts, drpe:, Newport ... (h STORE/OUicc for lease, l•'ULLY LICENSE'D Poniona, Placentia C.l\'I. f dahwhr, pool, rec rm, pvt ... L... .. 1300 sq ft, F.V. Shopping * SPffilTUALJST * Reward Return to 2211 B. patio, Close to bch. 1.1ust uu:;ANFR()NT• .l or 3 Br. Center. p a r 1 i al 1 y par t!-Spiritual readings 10 an1·10 Canyan Dr .. Costa l\icsa. 1 ~•Me. m>/rno. c.n collttt, ~··~ :S-~1: ext.11"": tinned. $250. mo. days ~tJ·N~~1ta~~i!1~t~ LOS'l': 2 dogs, .1 male p/G. .2131375-j!lS, ~:w696-I051 -., co e( 53G-0393, 968-0327 eves/\veek· Oemente. 492-9136 492-90.34 Dane, I fen1,. m heat. p/G. I ..__ v -... ends. ---~~---~-1 Shep & Collie, 8 mo's old. " --s• .. t.--PROBLE?iI Pregnancy, Con· 979-3255, 979-1461, •~ -•0 , I •· F1JU. SERVICE .......,..,U'IV ~: DLX 2 i: 3 BR, 2 Ba, encl 1 ~ Westcliff Building fident, s y m pa t h e t I c ext. 33. I .. ~. $1.iO up. Rental Ofc., lttfttalt I ,. Comer \\'eatcliff Dri\'e & r~~7 =~~· Abot·''R~U~ST=-.-...,-wn--... -.~,~, -m-lx-o<l • 30&3 Mace Ave. 5'$-1034. . Irvine Blvd., New p 0 r I n a 0 '642-4431i dog, w/short tail. Lost Aug. I u-rt •· h Beach, 1.tr. Jio"•ard APCARE . . 23. ll..B. Ans ' 'Page ' ' n.WflO -ac 645-610l. PREGNANT? Th 1nk1 n g Florida tags. Rew a rd ! • · ' 8 yf ltooms 400 Rbortion? Know all the fact8 962-6179. Ntw Custom • ront C.D.1\t. 900, 800, 500 Sq. Ft . first! Call UFE LINE -24 LO'~ST="s"mo~-0,.1d~b"l-ac~k-&~•~.h~ile I vo/PRJV' SCH &. PIER. 3 ROOMS f]p .. wX up w/kit $.XI F"rom 37 ccn1s. Alr cond, hrs, 541-552'1. ~mnyed & Hu skey. l • 8R. 2 BA. Frplc BBQ. .¥.1c up apt!. Odldren &: pet priv. park Ing, will ALCOl-IOLICS Anonymous. "Nanookc... Vic of Santa : • sa;/mo. Yearly,,;__.. Jltl aectioni 2376 Newport Blvd., redecorate. 2700 E. Coast Phone 542-7217 ot \\oTite Ana ~ Santa Iso.beUe. , ~f79..801 or ........., 0 a t . $48-91"".,0, ~3961. ll\\')'. C.\V. 1\1asten Owner· p 0 Bo 1223 ~-Mesa •-.. -~ ~'" ' •• &. U Overlook Realtor, 673-413'.) · · X ' ......,..... • ncwacu 646-... rt11 : · nONT 3 BR., 2 ha.. ftoomll $X1 p, . '"'"'°""'c:..:"-'=~-~-Soclil· Clubs 535 VERY iriendly off white dir-Yearly. $-00 Month inr harbOr & ocean. ~~ blk 1200 SQ, fl. office bklg. 1 •'r, 2 BR., t oo. Frplc. 1-Blk. to ocean. 250CfSeav>ew, CdM. Harbor Blvd, K-Mart, Pen-* INTRADATA * ~1:.._ pVulmpSancock·a·poon·typc • Pl f k' ~,. c. \a Ana over, 1'"' 'ocrean. \'early. $325 cilliiS'tIAN home, klt privl. ney 1 area. enty 0 pr g. CM. Owners not home. Call , ~ ' Mk For !\.like gaf,, Di'>' \fOrker. $9.';/MO. 380 \V. \Vil!On CM. 20c per QUALITY matches MS-3786 f' · JONES REALTY · 673-6210 1M8 W.iBaker ,St 546-8229. st. ft. Ph: 642-2020 w/PHO'l'O •===------ 1 ', BRAND NEW DUPLEX R I 'Bo.ird «JS DESK '!>«"' avall&bl• l50 "Largest in Calif." REWARD. Lost B i a c k Ocean , vlew Wlllk 10 beach oom , mo.· Wiil provide furniture (Call NOW for FREE g;im. mlni8:lure male po o d 1 e . ·, · , BR,· 2 BA. -..1c, $%15/mo Rbom 'or n ......... &: bo8fd at S5 n10. A~we.rlng service ple profile on .l p1"0flR'Ctive Wearing flea collttr. 5.16-8264 • ··~ ~ ........ ,. avaJlable. 11875 Beach Blvd. match. 24 hrs.) bet noon, or 213-335--0281 t./ yeaiy. 55l·1'36. l\te11B.~~t1.rea • Huntlngton Beach. 642-1321 714 -638·5920 I LA 658-6283 coUect. 'iwuM for rent. Mnt\m! ~'--~"~----~ 1617 WESTCLIFF-NB LADIES -Suntnler S""'"'inl 1 REWARD; LRdies B 1 u e " ··-rk'-· man. No dMnkf••. Su' mmor Reritols 420 ""' "-h t betw ' ""' .... ... 'Mii\/\ 'l'l'U!! & •~ Sq Fl A p1 yr membenhlr ~. Call ..... s mere swea er, n i · Cqnvenlent loc81ion. ~. ,.,., ~ · · m e 'PARTNER' 836-127l or Acords &: Heisler park, ,.· , 616-0010 · AVAIL ·'ill 'to 9/8. parking. UlH. Baumgardner, 548-1479. 1.11.guna 494-5258 ; '• PENtN. Water Front. Spac, 3 ', '3 'BR. 2 liA· $17'5. ="'='·~==·===-~---· COLD Rini, Blf. glasses in ; Br. 2F hoe.I sllp1 Avail. $325. ·NtAR 'OCEAN~ S'75-4l56 OFFJCE SPACE -Start your [SJ br: leather case, bet\\"n B &. I•. Wtr/$350 )T, Jie <n4) lt•ntals to sttlre· -430 day with a Harbor View. I .,. _, I L Sts. Vic. Bch.-Bnlboa _ MH3t3 ,1 61~ ~ ' , ~pace now avallab~ In the IMt 54(}.J9'l5 Rew. .•• BEAt.mll'ULLY decon.ted 2 \~RKI!'lG t~ ~1 n!h~ LIDO BVILDING. G73-415G. ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimm;;.:•11\lALE Weimaraner ml'<cd I ,,.. Br tmtnboue, pools, view, 2 ~~"1~1,. ~cony~'etcn Busfftlss Rental 445 • puppy( 7 mo. Tan ,v/aJiecld-.. _ .. pr.,Bluffa, $350 . '-Ml,. "'··r:"" · · so ~w •---• -- 1 . , 6i'H!l5 t:et'• 'e!ijoy a peacclUI c:un; ADOBE HOUSE. IOOO Found 1'-ads) 5 ~ · ~wuu. ~~•· home 6"-715.3 eve&. sq tt adjoining busy car.. BLK Fem cat. Lost Vic 15th I'. \'t BU( hm bch: 3 Br, 2 Bft., • . t 111~ ' 1or" bu-1 '" FND: ~tale Irish Scttf!r & Tuslin ~1. "'" ••17 I . ...._.. .. at. 01IP, tt')!ttr.IO. 127 FEJ\t. room ma :~,,.~ ..... to ner, .. ne11 or OUJce C .._., ~ I • 4i'thSi."NB-61"'~. l!bl·"i!!°' ~· !!..l~"seapt,lfs3, ~A~~/£~~ Me I a , M~ V~·~· Rewll!'d. ~ u vul .,...,., l».T'W4o'J ~ -------=-LOST -White w/lrg tabby l, JtM WISTCLlllfl DR. SST.50 mo,•+ ~I er Three story-7200• available FND; Blk k white Kitten spots. tern. cat. Any info ·; 2 ·9't 2 ~.attn. eppUancts. ~ . 1 at 24c a·_ .. .-... Oppostte 1'1ea collar Vic 25 call 645-l!rl;). GARDENING -CLEANUP Carpenter Reasonable Price -Free Est. • 541-2043 • ALTERATIONS • REPAIRS Complete Lawn & Gardening Patio COV!'!rs, decks, all types &?Nice • Haullng & of carpentry. Drawing 1 Cleanups. 548-0405 available. Phone; 548-7806. EXPER. J apanese Gardener. AIL types \\'Orie. New, Yard serv. OetUlups. Relia. remod, add, alter, franie, & neat. Free est. 642-4389. finish, repairs. Li c · JAPANESE Gard e'li er. 962-1961. Gardening Service, trim· Carpet Service ming, cleanup. 645-1796 -TrM Service. TREE Trimming including Palm trees, and t re e removal. Gen. clean up, Reas. & Insured. 847-1791. TREE and Stun1p Removal. Trimmin!,_, Shapi~. Spraying. UU1 D a v e , rr.,...5435, JOl-L~'S Carpet & Upholstery General Services ~.Sha~h° ~~rd~~~~: ALL types home repa~ I ' i' ·, I J ""Jl1 Degttasers & all color Actual time &. material. Ii· iiiiiiiiiiii;iiimiii.;ll!!J~~' 11 brighteners & 10 minute Fast Serv. No job too sm. j I bleach for white carpets. F&B l-Iome R e Pa Ir• Job W11t1ted, Fem•I• 702 Save your money by saving 642-l•I03. me extra trips. \Viii clean PORTABLE NEED help a t home? \Ve living nn. dining rm., & WELDING SERVICE , have aides, nur ses, hall $15. Any rm. $'1.50, \Vil! come to you evenings; ho'tisekprs, -comp:8:1l.lofls. couch $10. Chair $5. 15 yrs. "·eekends. No job too Small. Hdmemakers U p J o h n , exp. is what counts, not 54S-8212, ~1824 1 547-Q)SL method. I do work myself. SAN CLEl'\1ENTE AREA . SECRETARY, mat ur e' Good ,ref. 53l-0101. Paint'g . Plunlb'g _ Repairs. personable. Exp. fork lifts & CARPET CI ea n in g. l\1ob. Hrna & Apts. 496-sn1, construct. equitJ't. Bilingua l. Reruionable, efficient. Free 646--0977 IBM Selectric, S I H . estimates. · 646-41TI e s.M-9919 e HANDYMAN -all kinds of work, m ia ll jobs a DAY Work. General Clean· Carpet Cleaning specialty. 979-4636, 546-9723. ing, h nus e k e e p I n g. Floor Care & Windows Transportation. Realiable, Dutch \\faint. Serv. 537-UOS Haulln9 5'11-9330. DiBERNAROO and SONS SKlPLOADER & dump truck BOOKKEEPING -my home carpet sales, installation & "·ork. Concrete, asphalt, AIR, A/P, P&L etc., have repairs! Free Est. ~26391 saYlin"g, breaking. 84&-ruo. ~~· vie.;_ A~~~lla & GEN H II .~~nge=r;c·,.;-;:;:;-.;:.:;,:·,....,.== Cement, Concrete au ng. Tree/Shrub ;; tr lm. Gar & Yd cleanup. SECRETARY seeks pmition, CUSTOl\I CEMENT WORK Est. 531~77, 5.57-6904. typing, shorthand, g e n ' I Drives WALKS, P atios, LOCAL moving &: hauling by business, exper, 4$-0937, 2-6 Pool decks. Don, 642-8514 student. Large truck. Reas, ~P;:nt.:;:...,..~~,...,.,..,,....'°"'" CONCRETE Work·PaUos & Barry. 534-1846 or 67J..00oll Help WanNd, M & F 710 Drive"•ays, Walks. &15-3802 HA ULING, lite mo v In g , or 557-1898 For est. gara~ & yard c:leenups. PATIOS, \valks, drives. Saw, 548-3129 or 548-0405. break, remove & replace '32'""F1'=-. F"un=~N"'mm="'E""'v'"a-n"'f,..or concrete. ~fur e1.1. local furn hauls &: gen'I SeU Idle Items .. 642.5678 hauling. 543-1862, 557-27:wi, Trader's Paradise A FUN PLACE TO WORK :Jfie feuten £. efee Now Hiring Busboys & Dishwashers CLASSIFIED HOURS Adve1·tlsers mol1' , plaat theh· ads by telej>hone 8:00 a.m .. to 5:30 p.m. Monday thru Friday 8 to noon Saturde.y COST A MESA 'omcE 330 w. Bay 642.51i78 NEWPORT BEACH 3333 Newport 1Blvd . 642-5678 HUNTINGTON BEACH 17875 Beach Blvd. 54-0-1220 LAGUNA BEACH 222 Forest Ave. 494-9466 SAN CLEMENTE ~ N. El C&mlno Real 492-4420, NORTH COUNTY dial free 540-1220 CLASSIFIED DEADLINES Deadline for copy I: kills Is 5 :30 p.m. the day be- fore publication, except for Sunday & Monday Editions y,•hen deadline 11 Saturday, 12 noon. CLASSIFIED REGULATIONS ERRORS: . Advertise,. should check their ads daily & report errors immediately. THE DAILY PILOT ass~ liability for the fil'5t mr COl'l'eCt inlertion only. CANCEILATIONS: \Yhen killing an. ad be sure to make a record' of ihe KlLL NUl\.tBER given you by your ad taker as receipt of your cancellation. Thia kill number must be pre:- sented by the a dvertiser ln case ot a dispute. CANCEILATION 0 R CORRECOON or NEW AD BEFORE RUNNING' Every etrort is made to kill ot cOrrcc t a new ad that has been ordered, but \\'e cannot gu~ tee to do so until the sd has appeared In t h e paper. DIA[E·A·U."E ADS: niesc ad! ere strictly ~ash in advance by mail or nt My ooo o f our of- riceL NO Dhone onten. Dea411ne : 3 p.m. Fri41.1. COflta l\1e!1& off lto 12 noon -all branch of. rlctt. r.-POOi. ~. WANTEP ~'Oman ~ share N~. ~ Center, PoPlbJe. :-"I•tm,inster Axe. 642-4l96 LOST. Small Bfnck Poodle. '.:. 2, br; l·blk«Sn; patio private pool home w... de for local fourplcx. MALE I<ltten Red tiger -(Beau) Vic. So. Laguna Call fi'1 '2li yrl)'; no pets; i-.frfs t' Child. MJ.ukin V~lo Area. BkT. 675-7225 Httrbor View hOmes -Port eve1, 49S-1158. ! '· UB!> 46 St; lb .. ; 612-3331 Wiii COlllideJ: BM1<· -"THE Factono" hu a frll Dunllogh Ctr. 644--0-ln MAN'S Id wedding bnnd, lines times dollars ·ruu 11me THE O.\ILY PILOT re.. seTVH the rlaht to clu- I·~~ E.AirBLUFF 3 Br, 2 S., ~r Al>tMEot llPOllAR~Re II ol~oop avVa1111., __ l0I834~b S!Ln FOUND gro.)' kitten "Hot link rtyf:. flexible lo!ll 8-26 ~~~~. :v ~~!r~ \VWt POOi S* """ HO~ .... ~~ -a .w .JV\ Dog" vW!inlty N e w Po r t Stan ClemCnte ~O h11.do ell or part for o .C. >~' "· ' 567-mo a..tt!M or 548-t419 1 ND. or~. wt'St,-968.=-72'.lO-CRAY & white kltte:n. Vic. ol Property or \\.ilat have I vr.t.111 y 1,ue 2 Br. A Ptn 3'8R l iii bouie'to Share ln 1600 sq ft lNDUST. shop, FOUND: Olk & \\.'hite shagK)' Mnrioo Ave.. Balbolt Ia. yoo?? 548-Sno eves & wk. {~-)~-$200 mo f ltB $85 JTIO utlUtiee. $225. AllO XKl IQ ft oWct "91. Female, older, medium CAii 673-6163 ndl or 546-3676 days. ~ * &t2-it69 * . ' ' * !Q.2913 ·* · '95. C.M. 6-t6-2130. sfte. MIJl!ion Viejo SIJH338· 1'LOST""'='"l"rt~.=n,.ite-.-b"t'"k-wa-.ll:-•1 1 L"'lk,.e....,.to°'tra-.d"'e?"Our""'°"·rr.=d"e=r•s ~ ..,, 4 BR. ~ Bl, Avtll 1on, ,J>OOI. PERSON ~ mnted W OlronA dt l Mar. sm grnd FOUND, sm3ll gro,y lcitltn Df:Mis John School 542--0700 Paradlse column ls for )'OU! • , tennis crt, walk to 'Och. $435. ihart rem. 2 br Rpt. $100. floor, AIC. utll, ample on High Dr.. La run a . 1302 s. Syt11rnort S.A. art 5. 5 lines 1 _ mo. 64HlS!> J#,ino. HJ! 960-1612 pricg. $143 mo. G?H900 4!M-2971 fl'• • ........... ..u your • s dftys lt, (,.Ui:e to Trldtf Our Tradt.r'1 I1).e ~!Y~ PaRH"' OC A eood \l.'&n\ ad ll il iood Ll-FOUND: Siam!se. t..-!l at, lttms with en.H, u.w Daily for 5 bucks. Paradise column i!I for f!?Ul I~· • • .80-087S. Vllfmlnt. Lquna Beach. 71......,.2.860 Pilot ClaRJlfifd. &0-6G7!. ,_ Appty 3-5 daUy si[y, edit, censor or re- WANT frt.'C 6 clear int· tusf! any advert~l, ;>t'\Wed ranch or ~I'\ prop-151 E. Coast tlVtY· and io chan,c:t tts rates uty. ~de $1~.IXX> 'I'nuit Newport Be11ch I. ~ull\tlOfll without •~ 2nd s Equll1 Oppor. EmployeT prior noUce. ~. ' pm. I '""'!'~!'!!':~~~~""II 1138-4551 I' · CLASSIFllO =&m~N~•-v!IJo~Rd-.~w...,.-. QUICK CASH MAILING AODRESS 111r, 2 be., rsx3G· cton. 2 .. r THROUGH A P. o . eox 1ll60, .. ,. $8000 eq !or TD, powor DAILY PILOT l'Dl!,!_!es& bolt or? Prtnt:. Only. .,_u "' 1 -6134 -....:.· W,...-A_NT_A_D_i':::=====~I I • , • I o t I -. . . . .. . .. . . . ............... [~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~l ~~~~~~~w~~~M~~~·~~~·~,~~·~l~~~·~l~~~,~~~~P~ILO~T~~rw~E~~~~~E~R~J~·~ llDJ I ..... ii l[IlJ I I 014 J ml I [ ;' I J _OJJ I f •• I mi I .... ," t l(UJ ;ml m;·-·-·· .:.· ~·'~·~, :: DAILY PILOT ~. •-t 2'1, l97J l[H] I l[ll] I .,,, ,, .. I ;'I I 1 a si s Help Wonted, M & I' 71 0 Help Wanttd, M & I' 710 Hell' WtllNct, M & II 710 Htlp Wonttd, M & I' 710 Ht lp Wantid, M & F 710 H t lp Went td, MAI' 7 10 Help Wt nttd, M & I' 71 0 Ha fp Wtnttd, M A I' TIO Htlp Wanted, M l I' 711 Accf'ftl Cterk $600 --CLEANING iclll, iteede<l l d(l.)' 1 .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J--;G~a:no::r::ai1 AM:;:t:c:;h:;:ln::;l:,,;-· 1 LADY for Fiii In tut food NURSES Aides all 1hlftl, W ISTCL IFF ASSEMBLERS • w<.><'I<. Newp. II., ioeaJ DAY Protof>pe work. Advanc<d resiaUhln>, to am to 3 pm, MANAG E R TRAIN EE xint frinp bnlls. Beverly p~ ~·y ~. required. m-011J2 Klnet\ct, lnc. )~ V~orla no wimdL 53th335S ~= n:=ty~ ~~~~ ~?fa: 1651 E. Edi.rigcr, S.A. Ettotronici tUTn M«I• f"X· CLEJtlCAL ~IS WASHER St., CM. S4G-71S5. Equal Op. LIVE In houtekeepu It com· tlon in 30-60 day1. Olrr cur- ~i '""'uctlon 1lcp1. F'ull Hn1c WE NEED Girl Frldiy $700 home Ii ae.lary. Mu111 cook. $ltXn-SlliOO mo. Mu.t have Hntg. Sch are a . Con-Hour1 8:SO AM to 4:30 P?lf door 1 dOo vale9Cenf. Hoep. Ex per . ACXX)U1'i1NG t 1'tl i nee . emplonnenc Ir exef't!~nl f"et J>a!d. A drea:in Jpot \\'/ Phone G-J2o.4630 o r canva•sina ex-p~. 84J...M5l RECEPTIONIST DI¥ or nlllht. "° exp, noc., ..,y, tun job. WW lralll, no c• ti<P'nr °" ahorthand, et.. Apply In ..,.... 111\Y aft er eva. at 2930 West Cat HW)'., N.e . tl\.farlc In Ccnterl perlencerl atttsiemblf!r. for poritnetd por. Employer. panlon for 1 lady who wMlll rent m ll n a I• r 1 eam NURSES At<fl • Da)' ·tihill. At'Cli pay/ree. 10 key C.alc. llf..nttlt~. Ju11 JS min, front i:reat devcloper! If you !Ike perlencc. lJtl' typlne Xlnt aalary & Sa.nta;\na. T I I-SO challenae 4 people ttiil 11 LOAN (Mo r t &are J Call Mr. Newman msm NURSE Aides wanted, wWl"''!'~!'!!!!"""!""'l""illllllllif 0>. benefit• in nu &/c bldr. YP I t + w.p.m . Ap~ 111 Perwn )'OIU' cal'C!er . Alto }'ff Jobs. J) r o c e 110 r . Re 1 Id A-1AN or couple, early AM trnln~ Beach area, RECEntONIST Dile IMtennentA, lO'l J::. Call t'or Appt. and Cail Elly EHls, 556-~. buUdeNllrport area in newspaper delivery ln c1dl tor appt. Bak"r. Cf\I. 979--5300. lnd\lai01a.1 R.etationft CJ/ O>ntrul ~r Elnployment N.B., Call ~1390: For lrvtnt area. Xlnt route NURSE RY TRAINIE Roger'1 Oarden1 (714 ) 4f4.'40l MATH CLERKS J /i.e A<ency, :HOO Irvin< Blvd., App<. open. $300 mo. approx. R•r'• Gtrdtns Pft>oMbio"dtpendablol><I' ANCIENT '\"llh 1tatlstics Rptltude N.D. LOT MAN ~96l-4633=~-----~ Nftda d~pmdable, frieni! :'1 iu:~= = TELONIC //) 1 .'J'Jer GlllL.Friday ,.·/typing skill• Need \'Xpe man Jncludts MAN, yoon1 &: hi!Sky, for J~lp w/lftOcki~ ma.I l;ypin&. Apply Jn pel'Q1 1.t MARINER Apply in the peraonnel dept. /'<.I & llhng ablllty. Needed for 11 ~l• · Contact .tctady ~'Ork w1dl Sot! Watft' carry«il 4 odd ;om. 222t F'alrView ]load <Mta 1 . INDUSTRIES l\fonday thru r~ r Id a y , 6 wkr thro\.li'.h Oct. 15 from M;-'1~ at · Co., in SJC. No exp. nee. oppar. tor aaresaJve )'OWl& Meca • ~ NO\v Aoeeptini Appllcat .orui For l•guna Bt•ch 9Al\l-12 noon. JO ,u\t to l_ P1'1 dally Studio THEODORE ROBINS Vac, lns. ~. nian. Apply \n~ 2221 · PACIFIC MUTUAL 16 Fashion lsloncl l2. ~,;.949;. PORO MAN '°' ~eves. l'airv!<w ""· Mesa. RECEPTIONIST HELP Equal Oppor, Em~ 700 Newport centt>r or Newpor t Beach ~~~~o~!1::J J\~~11~~P~ 2000 Tlarbor Blvd., c.?\1. ~:~~~ta 1'iesa.' 100 2 OPl'ICl GIRLS WEEK END ONLY 9 , Newpo11 Beach Be't\\'n 9 & 11 a:n1or3 & 5 Pn1 ·1900 1-lar bor Blvd. Ci.\1 ' LUNCH \Valm.s11, La.cave ==='7-"-7-"=-=,-NEEDED A.M. to 5:00 P .M. Real , ASSEMBLERS Equal Oppor. Employer Equal Oppor. En1p~r GR IN & ee.>r It _ needs Regtaurant, !695 1 r v l n e 1'1ANAGE Apartments, Older Radio telephone dispatch Estate Sales ofnce ~ Av. C •1 App"· In ..........., couple, bandy, bond.able, ?<.lurt be 25, able to drive Call ROSS n • ~ ~n· llrolltr -Kitchen No Exper. Nece11. DEP.lONSTRATORS needed iharp reliabl" girla tor full ., .1• • l3 ...-~· Nev.'}>Ort Heiibb. Resume Apply In Pcnon un.n.a..a...r.. now. Unlhnited earnings 1inu• night \VOrk. Pleue caU ~ noo, r, l\lon • 8128173• to 1242"1 VentW'a Blvd! YELLOW CAI CO. 846-0641 Commercial pog.•dble. For info caJI.1-ii"'is-iii"'iii· 'iii'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil llilm-pm Studio City. 916M, or cal 186 E. 18th, Costa Meaa =REC=E=PTI=~o~N~IST~-lor--Irv-lne-1 ln.rine """AAU\ 842-6743. JI LVN o1rimMedications 7-J, full 213-877-1606n~ggrn. OUR bu•'--·· -"res an cl· law otfice. Lt. ~· .,.,.....,.., or p t e. Temp or perm. M CA ui<.>,,,.. ·~... I rl.caJ ~, .. ,, ""'-1002 Sky Park T lier oo~vr Shop, 6 a.111 .• 2:30 HELP' Nurse• Aides J...ll, exper EDI L Otc .. So. Laitma ficlent airl for shipplna A c e ......,_., req. _.. . Apply In Pcr90n NEVER A FEE AT TEl\fPO e p.m. Female, age ~5. Ap-0 pret'd, \VUI train mature B~.comBu"~·~~p ~rd/, other related duties, 1&111')' RET'IRED or atml·retlnd Hoon 9 am..a pm 3 pm·S pnl, l\1on-Frl Tempo Tempol'al')' 1-lelp ply in peraon, i\fr. Donut. pereon. Intervwa Mon-Fri, M":,'{;.al -..... "~.::tu't' ,_-::,?u•-co mmenaurate w/exper. man to overstt Laun-260'7 'V. Cout HY.'Y. 135 East 17th, CJ\I 1oatn-2pm, Mesa v er de a.1.... .,,,,, """" 1.uuuc Studio 12. 540-g.195, dromat ND 6'73-165l0 'tlft 8 Newport Beach 646-0201 ASSD.IBLY. inspecUon '° Experienced P/t1me DRESSl\fAKER; nC(!(I skillt.'d Conv._.Hosp, 661 Center St f"e9U:me. Secty: P.O. Box l'7, PARKING Atterv:aant, over PM or 675-0334 day "'1ppln< help requir.d tor UNITED dressmaker to copy dress. Volt Instant CM~. ., South 1-ma 9:!877. 18. Cali1 lie. Part. I/lime. ANSWERING Service , •mall electronic part a CALIFORNIA BANK Cull 499-..1731. LVN's 3-U & 11-7, full time, Mklclle-Agtd.Coupl• Call betwn 9e.m Ir 4pm. Fuhkln laland are a, fabriC'B.hon . Day shift , good modern facilities, x Jn t f'ull time, Maln~nance-cle&n-494-5762 P/ttme It F/time 1hift1 condlflon1 &: be n e 11 t •. 309 1'tain Street Personnel "'""kini cond. Gordon Lane Ing for apartment L'Omplu.p ~AR:;i;;T;;:'?,tl'-m-e-aat"e"~"a=dy"w°'ant=ed avail; 640-8073 ~-~=18TT=. ------Huntmaton Beach Dr's Assistant Convalescent Hospllal, 1821 Llve-Jn. No chlldren or peti:. iD new art pllery ln Autmbler1 & Tr1lnt11 ATI'ENDANTS & Wai~s 536-8811 YoUlli lady (18-28) to assist E. Ch a pm an Ave., Salary Open. Lqum. Mut be attr•ctiw All 3 1hifts. Apply at pte 1'~/time. Mature women In heallh spa. Will train, no NEEDS F'Ullerton. Call 644·2611 &: over 25 yra. Average 15 7a m -:; pm It llpm. prtf~. Good com Pa!' Y Equal Oppor. Employer e:"<p. nee. Apply In person LVN for 3'-ll & l1·7 relief. MORNING auto route w/100 hn. per-wk. Startin&' at MacGregor Yacht Corp benefits. Pleasant WOl'ktng 1 !!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!• I any art or eve. 2930 \V, • Secretaries X.1n't waa:ea. Call 642-2410 Register tn the o.ta "fesa $2.~ w/earty advancement Im Placentia Coara ?.tea.a'. cond. APIJ!Y in person, I' Coast liv.')'., N.B. • T I or apply, 1445 Superior area. Approx. hn Uam. Persona.I lntevlew btwn. AUTOMOTIVE ' Newport Villa H"ilhcarc, JP Sfs A·-N B XI 'I Ill ~1ua ll AM & S PM at 1.1!8 S. 4000 Hllarl W N B ..... · · n perm. P me ... • PuU dept. ha1 eeveral open-a ay, · · EARLY mom. newspaper • Keypunch LVN full or p/tlme. 3-lL Uon. 54(}..3006. c.oast Hwy, Laguna, itWs· lncludlna: Parts A1TRACTIVE cock ta} I COMMERCIAL dellvery. Must hnve C'ar. Hunt. Sch Conv. Hosp, 18811 "M""OTEL=:-<M:;:~=,..,-hn-WCll'k-,...,-tn PART ttme jobs. Ideal tor counter man parts helper v.'al"trea, e.xper. undtt 30. TELLERS Over 21. Pay approx. $200 • PBX Opn Florida St., H.B. 847-351!i. eicch&nge tor apt or aa~. students. Illlide work. 4 hrs. 4 _,..._ d~ . ..-.A co'. Apply Beach Ball, 2U6 \V, 1 nw. Hunt Bch. are a. Ex 'd -M·F 1: 4 tin. Sat am. .,... ... ......... Oceanfront NB Tues Sat EYl'IArlenctcl 817 2300 bef 10 m LVN, full & p/time. Modem e.xp · a.i•<> Newport Bl •• ...... '""""" Benefits. phone (714 ) ' • · .. _ · -· a.· Tempora.ryServict convalescent hosp. Call CM. 548-9155. =00~·'-~~"'=·~----- 6t&-9S03 10M1-1Pri.f. Full & P /tlm• Ero.Mt pl LOYMENTll II 01'f'Ef RED NJ&IS Carn8e""3 hDr., Su~~~ 106 642-0098. MOTEL MAID WANTED P/tirne Silk.screener, exper. h•••••••••I BABYSITrER NEEDED 2 n e, sma te m g co e'-''/).)rl ac ......,..4741 ,vlll train, apply in person on semi auto &Ilk acreen Sch age children, 12::SU to 6 UNITED needs reliable f It i n1 e Equal Oppor. Employer Machinist Costa Mesa Inn. press. Fabric exper. pn!l'd. PM, nr Golden \Vest &: CAL IFORNIA BANK employee. Oppor. to gro.v Student ok. Studio U, P.lansion. Transp &: ref. \\'/co. 1'-1ln. exper. req'd. J>rogreMive nlanufacturing Nitt RKIPfionlst ~ 'York: 556-7924 or Alt 6 pm 2'J5J La p11 Rd 979-2290, Jim Cl in e , H EL p Wanted-Richard'• company, :-.:ln't v .. orklng con-Resld. care facility, 11 :30 i:Pmm.;;,:· =:....,0=,,.:--;u=»"s'°'so"' 96()...1266. Mission Viejo, Calif. \veekdays. l\1arket. 1660 MacArthur drt:ion11. 'f'rlngc bcnefit.01. i~~t -7:30 AM. 842-77'88. Flting, ~. ; "I~ ef BABYSITTER • SUbstitu1e Blvd, NB & 3433 Via Lido. lmnledial~ Opening For: 'fhe Huntington, 1 8 8 5 1 switchboard. 8 3 3-o 911 teacher needs responsible 137..00U 1 Exec Sec'y $700 NB. Florida St., Jl11nt. Bch. 1 ASSEMBLY Reuben's Plankhouse lt Now Hlrin1 Full Time Day -Dishwasher & Busboy Apply In Person 12342 llrookhuc•t A ... Gor~n Grove 539-3202 ' VARIAN HAS 2ND SHIFT OPENINGS! \\'Oman on part time basi11. Equal Oppor. Emplo.,er ln H~se Council •r= Htlpl HousekHper AUTOMATIC SCREW ~:~AR;;7'°':=:.;T:;;l"~l°'Ec-, °"ru"n""'rtrn"•"',-.,.:::. 2-3 day1 a \\'eek, 7am-3':30 " Secretary .iwv _ __._, hll MACHINE Ref Car r · al •-. 700 1r=uo:u, aome c d care. NEEDED NOWI per not nee. Enqulre at Equal Oppor, EmpJO)'er ~?;· .,.,,. er. n e C ·I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! inane! ;;)O(.'\!'ys 10 S1600 CdM, beach areo. 540-!WSS. OPERATOR • Str&lo1.' Hat Pizza Palnce, '.,.,;, ... .,;,,;.,!!!!,..;.,;,,m.1 U't't-"'tUO't Sale& Scc'ya 1' COOK for year around child AIP Oerk $500 HOSTESS Brov"n a: Sharpe or Traub, "San=;;c;;J;;:ua;:n.:;..===;;-- BABY2S!TrER.-mature3 dysltter day care eerier. S Hr. d•i· NCR Operalor $450 Ovor 21 "" P"Y & tenefn•, se>up & operote. e DISHWASHERS PBX OPERATOR * SALESMEN * for mo. old infant. s a ly. "--r n ... St •~ Oran•·· Le · al >'"-' ... ..,.. ......._, .._,_..._ week. my home, durina' tall l.N••"" ~ "" '" a&J.ng & .,, ;rwv someday&someevesshifts e BUSBOY v1u,r ~per. ,,....,t"'"""" opn Do you take "Slalelmen est 833-3759 C.M. 645-6570. F'/C Bkkpr, Corona Apply in pen;on between 9-11 SHUR·LOK CORP need apply. Operat'l> ros Dial wantt'd" ada wtth a rratn of VARIAN DATA tern er. COOK fcmaJe, Convalescent Title expcr. '.\r:iO Al\l orniake appt. Apr•iy At ~lu11 be clean It: neat. Over Board.~ Penonnel. lifan-1!8lt?C4n'taaylbl&meyou. MACHINES BM~~ I~:. RW= ti.~~P:in:~~art time. Sec'y Consulting $6:iS WOODY'S WHARF Rohe Sc ientific 21. Dependable. x1n·1 work-~r. I followed u~ frw :u Sehl 642-tool aft 6 ~~YBk;.~ :: 2318 w. Newpo11 Blvd., NB 926 So. Lyon St. ing conditions. S.lbo.11 Bay Club ~put .... & ..J~-._ m 0 · f bl area. pm. COOK, Asst Man ager, FIC Bkpr Boatng 1100 67>0474 S•nt• Ana 1221 W. Coast Hwy., N.8. up to .. "' l.'NUW ~ tbe • -~lling'to woo r_,_ a,sndsem~ .. f!!rB,·n. BABYSI.I IER, hourly, pick .... ve·-...1 shift. 6 d .. v wk. · HO.....,. Appl.yin penon PBX O •-· ad. W < .. •• ild 1 ,_. ~ Gol Fri/Con"' -$600 . """SS SURF .. ~SIRLOIN ...,._, '"'""""' I& Y9l1rH!I a laY!!LA ~ Varian pays a •hilt dif-up ch fro~ achoo at Irnmed opening. Co. pald l\len1ory Test Tech $4-S5 hr e BLUE DOLPHIN e l\tACHTNisT Class A, l\lill .or 5930 '"· Coe.!i't H\.\-y, atr'rire;-HB•Ew hoUl'L--plore thll one. If )'OU'dltn · ferent1&J + these regular noon. 645-61'.nS, 8J3..81.82. benefits. Jack ln The Box, Digital Test Tedi $4-$5 hr 33.5:) Via Lido, N.B. lathe, -1 dny \\Tk "'eek. !Ohni ! Nt""·port Bee.ch 536-8881 to niake $250 a week tm- outstand ing company BABYSI'ITER-OhriJtian for 1205 Baker St., Co1ta Ale&a. NEWPORT HOTEL -front desk clerk per day i\lon-Tlh1ur&.i ~pply i "'!'~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""!!!!~I PET SHOP usistant, must medtately, with an ~ IO benetit1: 2 boya. Mon &: Fri. Own Apply In penon. p I A • in pef'90n, Voug t D \1slon, ~NE be able to \\Urk momings. much more 1n tht ,,_ transp. 97'9-l•n. COOKS ersonnt gency exper. pref'd. Apply in 290 Fischer Aw., 0.-f. ' :ED "A"Oman to do lite !Jl62-8000 I 'd like 10 talk to ;;.n Com..-ltlye DISHW S ERS 833 Dover Dr., N.B. per90n, The Rodeway Inn, ~l02-I. housekeeping & help take -·all I"'"'' BEAUTICIANS, hair 1tyllsu A H '42-3170 1400 S.E. Biiatol, CM. care ol l2 yr. old boy in ex-PICTURE FRAMER yoor ,-neat1-,,,_ Salaries A: aggrelliw: manager need-Dick Oiureh's Restaurant 557-8700 MACHINIST change tor room&: board&: Ort.n&e County's most corn-our l'f<l\lftmentl, th1I Cl'.dd. ed for Harbor Area Salon. 2698 N~"rJOI"t Blvd. 01 :::;:c::::=:z:=[iHROTEifij;L::.houhOO;..,;;rn;;;.,;;,-:.-;;;no~ex-Part or full time. Day or reas. salary. 'Ved It: Wknds pltte &: fastest gnw.1ng be the career )'OQ've bent ·e laMc: Malor l n tere1ting opportunitle1, ** COOKS ** Exec. •--r~ory per. ncr. Apply in person, night shift . Top pny. orf. Call 962-0056 or aft. 6, Lwtoni framing opernl:ion. 1 1ook1~ tor. In 64&--~ or 494-6364 eves off'IO •1 Call ~206 !168-1190. ......i In aU nteMl' ... w appo tment 11)..4 & Medical . First & second cook.I, xlnl To V.P. of rapidly growing The RodE'\Vay Ir;n. ~1400 S.E. rk I h • [-J\1U.'il ha\'c cx1"".ence Pri.f, weekdllyll, 586-3182. BEAUTICIAN • Be your own working hours. Employe firn1• Stock exchange llsted. Bristol, C.~I. 5."u-8j00. ri.fACHINE \\.'O , at e o.: NEW ACCOUNTS phases. Top w&j{es. 646-2996. Sale• 6 Days Vaca• bou, rent yoor own atatlon. benell". &12-35(1;. Requittsgood skills pl"' ini-HOUSEl<EEPER • Elderly aswmbly. Ll>• rnanu!. No PRESS OPERATOR TOY " GI»T PARTIES .. .,_ _..__ 6 Nwpt Bch $20. 646-2S1' ~ _ Experienced, all ·tiative & administrative man &: invalid wife need f~.mk>n. Call 54S-M35 or Women to won: tor plutk: HoUM'Aivts demomb"aton, '""' mTWI' ISKKPR·IAYSIDE-OFC shifta available. Apply in ability. Xln't v.'Ork lng concll1. mature Y.uman y,·ho need• .ncr-. · REPRESENTATIVE n1oid~ plant. ~3370. earn to $2,COO by Dec. L N<> lllOlllllS, 12 Subatantlal investment OJ. in penon. lJ99 s. Bristol, 01. Front ofc appearance &: home to live In. F1nanc. ar· 11,uos-no exper nee. Apply rteltvery _ no collection. N.B. has opening for a VandeKamp's, A division of goOd grooming a must. From nli'zntll negotiable. (213) in penon, The Rodeway }'ree Hosteu aifta. need clayl after 1 bookkeepers ass i I tan t Tiny Naylor's. SQ'.O. lt"or intervieo.v call, 438-~ Inn, 1400 S.E. Bli5WI, c.r.t. 1 year experience ~-PRODUCTION car. 523-M84 GUt1 'n w/accurate typing aklliJ. COOKS "dinne:J: &: Smiler'' Cathy. HOUSEKEEPER / Sitter, 557~700. Excelll'flt salary and com-Cadgets JN'• ?t1ust be a no~ker, "''ell Apply in per&on Hours 2 to 6 NO FEE EVER beginning Sept. 4 Io r MAID, FOR MOTEL. parry benefits. TECHNICIAN SA~l.E~SLAD--Y--1-.. --bo-....,.-. e Christmas & groomed, &. en.JOY meeting Hungry Tiger Rest. 1641 W. teacher. 7:304 Muat hRve Laguna Ree1 Motel Plea.o;e Call For Between 22 I: 40 yrs. Apply people. Pleue send resume Sunflower Santa Ana ~G trana~or Uve nr OCTD, 30£()6 s . O:ie.st.Hwy., Perform electronic checkout between Bam-l 2noon , New years &p OoalaryBox requireme,~; Ne~~ COOK Breakfut & . Lunch j ·( ill. 21a Dlt ,_. Dr. --....,,7='=====-· I Laguna Beach, 499-2003 Al>POintment oRSf ~ .. "''!..Yen•·.prodT-~~ical· 548-3031. 273 E. 17th St, week; off. ~acli Ca 93i6aw, -...-· Tail ~t The Whale Rest.: ........ US.lift HOUSEKEEPER l\fAINTENA.1\"CE Job Linda LaCour or se";i'::e ;'~1 tra~ in c.osta Meu.. Ca pc a ke ·• ••• ' • P fit Sha • BR~AST It: lunch cook Call Bill 673-4633. l.agwla Niguel area Opening (714) 547.7571 ~lectronlcs I: "'in l yr =Bakery~==~=--~ ro Mftt)1 2 days per week Building maintenance related uperlenoe. SALESMAN, f/time. Mena "', ~-L optllOlns, nee<11J""'ed:.....~. :U' ~ CREDIT UNION 1 ;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;,1,=;;;,:-~~58£:'.:::,_..,... ""•· hn., 5 day wee• GREAT WESTERN tumilhlnga & •poruwear. -~ -.,.. 11! HOUSEKEEPER · lo Contact Manager. Call For Appt Exper, prefd. Contact ~ir. --.t·-ment tchen l\urk. Some local Exec. Sec'y to V.P . , llve lll, r Anchorage Apts. 548-1501 SAVINGS Industrial Relatlontl F1e!Jcher, Hoelscher's, 33.13 nrru-. refer. 310 W. 4th St., Santa Fee Paid. Vice pres. of large employed, couple. $75. wk. Dally 9-5 s. Brlatol, Co!ita ~lOAL (So, Plan. Ana. Need!'! Your Help corp. seek11 the ultima._te Top refs. req d. Reply to P.O. "" F·~ion 1~and (n4) 4M-9t01 Cst Plaza), SCHOOL Bus d r i v e r s 8Af<l-4PM Mon-Fri accurate skills, fast typing Box 1438, Laguna Beach. G ~ ~ ~ I -''""'-==~===~~ positions require ex· v.~ted, i:oute• in your area. " & good sh, some dictaphone, HOUSEKEEPEKS Sa~ & Sun MANA ER Newport Beach TELONIC SALEs.HOUllWARIS .perience in the tollowini '\iU tram. Good Working Credit union e>.1)er. pref. Fmt ofc appear, &: sharp plelll8Jlt wotking co apply Equal Oppor. Empl, l\t/F INDUSTRIES Exprk'd pret. Mu.t bt able to areas. Cabling, wlrewrap, cond. 10961 Dale St., Stan-mind. Salary to $675. Also in penon only Newport TRAINEE wu Sat • Sun. KERM or mechanical as!tembly. ton. Taylor Bua Service. Call Mr. Thompson Fee J obs. Call He I en ~il~larl :eal~~are. 4l:nJ NOW goi111' through planned Laguna lt«h n~ :i~. ~AREta 11' ... 2666, Don't be left out -Apply BUSBOY tor private club. (714) '40-3410 Mason. 54G-605.5. Coastal a a ay expansion. Need 12-15 yn. ~ now A join a growtna corn· Muat be 18 or ovtr. Non stu-Personnel Agency, 2 7 9 0 * HOUSEKEEPER * No Exper. Ntce11 Exi>er. flnlah cab l net Equal Oppor. Employer SALES abi needed M Balbol. pany. dent ~lut have exper. $:%.%) PACIFIC MUTUAL Harbor Blvd., Cl\t. Xlnt y,."Orldng conditions. En1-Eam As You Liam makers. ~2860. ""':~'!!"""''l""'l"l~"""" I l•land. Call 6'73-6283, after 6 Please Apply Jn Person Or Conlact. J. Fuller VDM 2722 MlchtdlGll Dr. lrvlne, C1llfoml• SU.2400, ext. 336 F,qual Oppor. Employer hr. Apply in person, Daily 700 Newport Center Dr EXECUTIVES ployee benefits. No eicp. Nur111 A idt...... Radlolottc.1 5-cy. .;cc:.•i::.1.::6.16-1649:::...;=-----I bet llam. Big Canyon Coun-Newport Beach $12,000 to $75,000 needed. 642--asos. I~:ro& :=in'!7~ Orderlltt Part lime. Type X-ray l•--------1 try Club, No. 1 Big Canyon Send resume or call TODAY HOUSEWORK, 4 hours each ment w/~ we can de-Opmlnas all shlf'll. Coed reports. Exp only. Cootad SCHOOL BUS Dr., N.B. Equal Oppor, Employer for conlidenUal NO COsr rooming. ?tton thru Fri. $40 ~......-.iarti xln't bene-Dept. RAdkllogy Costa MHA BUSBOY • Day11, no eic-I!"'"""""""'"""""""'""!!!! executive interview. wk. Own car. 556-1577. =es~ ~': fits. °\.1:.-~pted, J.ortatemort"~" ~1t~!..~a1 ~ DRIVERS perience necesaary, just a DAY Waltres.~s &: Niie EXEClll1VE SERVICES, older 1'1.'0men prrl'd. LVN . t · .,.._.,""" ,._... ""'Y' Appl.icatk>na betlll' •t"C!Pted willingneSA to learn. 210 Cook, O\'et 18. Apply In INC. INSURANCE SALES program. Charge u.7 shllt. Relief portunity Employer for Sept. employment by N~rt Center Dr., N.B. person, 2-Sprn, Mon thru &lS N Ualn, Santa Ana Job Stabi6ty LVN . Ali "'"''· Bayview ·REAL ESTA'l'I< SALES oontractor operatlna In 6#-1. Frl. CARL'S JR. (714J 547-9625. Conv. Hospital 540-5690. SUCCESS CAREER ~rvine Unifleid School Oiat. BUSBOY full time, rnmt be E • _ _. No exp nee., earn while you Group Insurance NURSES.Ward Clerk. 7_3:30 New or cicperienced. Join the er.xta holdlna: valid sdlOCJ able to work split ahlfl 6882 Warner Aw, H.B. xpenenc:.u learn, part lime, eves I • \Veekendi off. Xln'I WJl.ges \Vorld'11 largest and fastest bus d'rtver certiftcate prtf'd. lunch & dinner. Hungry DELIVER\'1\1AN for early Boat Carpenter wknds, run time when quali-Paid Vacation & benefilll. Apply at 1445 ~thwl:Coe'= ~~ ~i;l"!1=~~~~ ~ ~~ W. Sunflower d:if:l~~ ~~·e.T~r;:t ~~ to \\Wk on 3T Trawler ~~crs Insurance Group Automatic Scllary Superior Ave., N.B. omce. and beoome a Xln't lalarie1 A benefitL ecoromtcal car. Good sup. yachts. Ed Lani * 541).!8.34 Increases Nur8e!!t member ot our AUllionalft Call: M~. Walp, tn4) BUSBOYS wanted, Beach House Inn, 619 Sleepy plementary Income. No Paci!ic Traw1er Corp. RN·l VN-AIDE Club. MultHnilUon dollar 544-1170. 1 ·--------J Hollow Way, Laguna Beach. 1• WANTED &iboy1 app!Y in ------- Asacn>1!Ja'I solidtilli, oo collectlng. 2~1 547-6908 IRONWORKF.R EXPER. Advancement 11-7 & other shirts. Top pvt advert11tna: program. f'rff hn. daily. Over 23 yean EXP. office girl, p/time, ap-ORNAMENTAL duty P/lY. llnn1ed. pay for R'IJ&l&.nteed llcerudna: 1Choo1. o J d. WestmJ.nster/Garden pn_m. 19 hrs/wk. Typing, LAGUNA 494-6376 Oppor. rtoor duty.Co u n I y wide 1'.:..tcellent aalea trainlna. ~-~-- SECRETARY Experimental Mechanical Assemblers pef'IOn. Alley West 2106 W. Ocean From NB 67>1714.. Grove/Huntington Be a ch bkkp'g & payroll. Apply "IT"S Fwi to •-rk at Far-lntr\'\\·s. 1'fon-Fri 9-5. \\'hat fJI your Ucenae worth 638--· w~ Th -• Fri 8 • (71') 135a7417 Lescoulle Nurses R..nstry,, to you? Oieck our monthly atta. ~. cu, u... oi: • re\J '1" Find out why. POii· , 351 1-fORpHal Rd., NJie(Lob. bonus Pf'OII?'ll1ll whlc:h means Me tCbeABINETNMBakeni DELIVERY Men, perm part ~-,noot Hn on81Y1·te ;1_!;'l3NBW, tlon1 avail for bu 1 T ic Toe Sytteml, Inc by Parle Lieb Bl d 1 ) $$$ to )'OU! Pleue call us exp, · · atta. time. Ear'" morn 1 n g '-vtl \\')'., u . ..,., boy/dWtwasher. No exp. v1~ I J -•H] ~·" ~"'W! " 642-9955, 540-9954. •a•n a onee o,)<l"'lgl •• V"t.r.w.JV. newspaper delivery to EXPER. loving care for m.v nee. Rapid advancement Equal '()prior. Employer CARPET C'leaner he I per homn tn N.B. S3XJ per mo. 7 mo old boy. Afy home, possible. Apply Mon-Thon. Want ad result. ..... sc..:i671 R.&. SALESMAN Carpet Cleaners, 1 7 4 0 DELIVERY &. Stock work. (TI4l 624-9489. Equal Opportunity EmplO)'er tecbniquetc of TlJE GAL- To Recreatianal Dir $665 Per Mo "'anted. Neat, enerptic, & bonua. Call LA Times Bal. Island. Own transp. 2:oo.G:OO. at 16301 Beach Htlp W anttd, M&F 710 Help W•nttd M & I' 710 Investigate the new approach \\'l\ll'e• :;pen. Steam Muter f>42..48QO, Refs. Call Collect alt 6pm, Blvd, Huntington Beach i~~iiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiii' iiiiiiiiiii le innovative n1arketlna S · A ~1 l.ERY OF HOMES. You J F lvt Yuro upenor ve .. ~ F/tlrn<!. Af>Pll;',_!'utomoti .. FACTORY he!J,, will tTain. JACK·IH-THE-BOX MACHINISTS * wil l be glad you did; Call Ml11lle Ex-ritnce CASHl ~R/SECTY Supply Co. U>4J Newport Young mature woman Nov.· Hiring Oean-Cut In· * !l63-56ll tor am>ointment. Second Shift Brokerage f1nn needs Cash-Blvd., Cocta Meta. pref'd. St $2.10 hr. C.P..t divktua~ to work Night « LlceMed or unlkenHd we Ov ll"r.Seciy, Exp. pref. but not DENTAL Receptlonllt. area. 545--0401. Grave Yard Shttt duril'l8' d Shift \\11\ ll'a.ln. Req't deli.re to "''Orie wipe.> ple of all qs. ~fW!l 11" able to coordinatti Aft club ac- tlv1tlctl In • busy A tnno- vadvc planned conmnmf'b'. Good l!ki1ho In IY>(na A "'1 a mu.t tor thil fUn spot, • Some ertfrne t'l'(fil. \\'Ill train extrernely Orthodontic pr act Ice, FEMALE Companion tor sc:hool mOl"ltha. 2n -=R=EAL"~ESJ=~A~JE=-SA="l.{"'S"'" l •h!U'p ga1 ~+o 1YP<I ...U. ot1!.1tandln& opiJ(O'IUllity tor same, SS. Uve In/out !or Apply In """°n PLUS OVERTIME WlD perform close tolttanee f"or appt call 9lctry Dunn qualllled perton. To $700. Sep!. Possibly longer. Pref, FTlday btwn 3 &: 5 P~f., :nblym~:r :'is ':f~ 11:1 49'1-97S1 , ' Send resume to Classified driver. 546-1575. 18642 Beach B!vd., H.B. liiardwan?. ri.turt have l'X· CASl llER & General Office Ad No. 90l, Daily Pilot, FUlL A Part Tln1e lfelp JANITORIAL -Part Pttlence in filing, titting, \\'ork, full & part tln1e. ~.O. ·~ ~ fi°'ta ~e~, WMted. Ovtt 21, iv/neat time/full time, 1oc11I, eves. ~ & re a mine . l\tust be over 25. Contact a. • P Clf 1 c Y clean appearance. Apply in Ex;p'd adult1 only. S2.40 per itnowt~eeblt' In fastener ~Ir. r· I c I 1 ch e r C/O confide nU3.l. penion, Me I: F..d'1 Pina, hr. 979-.3923 ~Jquei, l"Old ~et rtveu. Jtoelscbers. South Coast DENTAL. Exp'd Chalnri&! 410 Eut 17th St., Costa 1~J~U~N~l~O~R~SA~L~E~SMA=~N~: $i:e Mc.J1wts, 8Cl"eW'I A nut Plaza, Costa Mesa. Asllstllnt tor Cos:ta Me1a of-Mesa. Eilm $2>-$40 per ~·eek work- .,_ Wltb.J.We ot drW Jigs, CJtEF needed. Exoemnced ~·c~!e~1~P~~0~8o0: l'IDnrll(R-full Jiane ing a11eru 1 school and Satur· ~-,. hand-<ooll, lb<· Apply o.nver Mlnln• Co, u ~ M Calll -1111111/Ut days ,. ng new ""'™'""" ~...-.;f lhop aidl. 719 \1,1. 19th St, CO.ta 11.lep, I"° ....... sta esa, ~~60 Uon1 for the DAILY PILO't. ~2343 D F. NT AL A 1111 i1 tan I , Wanted 5 days per \\Wk; This Is not a paper route Apply In Per"" ~* C HILD CARE Chairside, al least 6 mo'•' dependable, experienced, 11.nd doc-I not lnch.1de de-exper. ltB. area. 84&al540 gardener for landacaped 11v~,. or -11~-. Open -u _ _.__ Blvd. ( ~ ~. okl 9 lrl) & lilt n• '" ~w• · • ..,.. rMl"VVt' . 1 • · betwn. 8--12 Ml or 5-.8 prn. commerdal propertte11 tn tnp In Costa a.tep, }~ountaJn CM• MeN, Ctllf, hovtaWO<k flw lttchlng Dl~'TARY Aide full time NcwPOrt Belch. RA>ferenco• Valley and SOulh Huntington ft"llly, from 2 le S p.m. mornlni ihllt, 'xint frl""'1 rt<IU""'1. Call 9 to 10 wtek· S..ch. Apply now by caillng dl!ll.,_,,....,., for 1chool bnlta. o.verly M•1'>r Coo• do.YI for 1""""1ew, 642-16211. MS-3013. ye•. Nttr Bebo Chica """P:.... Capistrano Bcad1, tGARDl!NER * Equal Oppor. Employer & w .. tmfnster, Pl11at 491)...51,11;, your own 8ota KENNEL wwktt for animal ' I I .fte 6 DfSJfWASHER ew ahttt, >)JU or p/thne In )'Out botplt&I. NB-Jrvh1' are&. c • ' p.m. \Yed thru SUn. B a h t a own areL 11~ tnmme. FUii or PT'. \Vrire aautned lft.4INO. Corinlhinn Yacht Cb>b, Hm Guerim..d Cuitomero Ad No. 00!, Dally Pllol, Oppor. ~mil OllW W'1 I< 1ml amoun1 B.,,.ide Dr., CdM. S.. ai.t Ho CHh Down P.O. Bex !560, °'"a M..-. home cart':, my homt. 2 ti! 6 Debus. Earn r.; p Lau~r ~~::::lliS=~~-,==-==,.,.- •t rlvt tht oNp! O.Uy M/F Stan ~ll Call DOMESTIC Rtlp 0...... ffi:oejj AJ!y d1¥ is Ui< ~DAY lo ' • • LATHE MACHINISTS MIUING MACHINISTS 3 )·ears nut.chine shop experle~ tn manufactur. Ing precision 1irototype appllcatlona. parts and tooli ng requlred. Will perform the layout Md IT!a· chlnlmi; ~ compllcnt.ed paru lrom dlmen1dom.l printj or sketches. Saturday I evening int1rview1 •rranttcf APPLY IN P E RSON 3a33 Horbor Blvd .. Cost• Me ll, Collf. Or coll; (714) S41 -. Ext. 153 An equal OWortUnlb' l!mplO)•er l\1/F "Ult"1t In Lifted~ Shlp aft S: 54M489. Allt!n By1and Aafncy, !~ti nin an &di Don t dday. · to Acft lt..tta! ..,....,._ Need a "P'lld"T ,,,ace Mad! t . 16th St., S.A. 547..o.195 W&nt ad IUUlla • • •• .64Ui678 .call todl,)' &0-6671. 11•••••••••••••1111• ( ' ' • New ol'f\cp In l.AgunR Bee.ch . Mwrt be llcl'nsecl, but \\'ill consider eaaer, nl?W ll\let- poople. ~lan.v advant'J[t1. Contact: Dorio Smith Amerlcon Home Rultor Coll Jent Gomn (714) SU.2'22 DUN HILL 8i5 N. Cst. Hwy., Laaun& 01 0rMtre County * 4..IM-1001 * Artney, 1nc. R I AL E STATI SALI S 18562 111&eArtnur, iltl!e 1111 FREE LICE NSE lrvlno, Clllf, 9:11117 TRAINING §J&:ttffiARY I fWe;&nisc FamoUI Real Elt&te 1Jcent. lot-profe.lonal otnce, Ing eour.. ,.,.. avaUtblo Newport Centu. 1°1'Plnr. thn& Tarbtll Jlellton. J"rff dlctaphone, no 1horfhand, Placement Servtct. Fl'ee C1ri Friday. $550. awttnr. Tralnina Program. Ea.m Opportuntt*t. Hand .mtten \lo'hlle )'Otl Iee.m. Call A1 rtttumft. Oualtlfd Ad No. SlcAn (nfl -11!5, 0.lly Pilot. P.O. Doll R.E. SALESMEN 1500, O>ata M'.... C~UL Why ... work In lt,t botftlt :~=mi'=. =,.,.-----1 area , Huntln1ton SECTY·Bkkor, lhonbaM, Beach/Fountain Valley, Loi typlna, bcoltk,.plna. One us traln you! Ask tor J.1r. &lri ofc, mUJt be ablt to sntd<r, VILLAGE REAL tal!e l'<'l'Ollliblllty. StJ.vy ESTATE, -n .,...,, Lquna. lM-'1115. PllOT-AOvtATISER Wodnetdif, ~ 29, 1973 Wednesday, A11911sl 29, 1973 DAILY PILOT SJ i;;;; ..... ;;' -~~ -~-· ·;;·-;;;; .. -;;l[Il);;IJ~1~1-·-·,lllii·-..'fill .. 1 1 iii! ;:· ,,.,,.. l[!JJ I Holp £.-. MA' 710 Holp Wonted, M&F 710 Holp Wonted, MIJI 710 lffip Wont..i, M & f 710 Att;mtiiil!iii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~m; I~ I l~I I~ I~! I~ . .. ' •• •cNn••• I •c:hli.11111 ... ct.Alt •• IOO f'umltu,.. 110 l11noou1 118 Ml1cell1neout 118 ·S(CDrrllllrl' SR. BILLING CLERK ~~~~ * =~ * :UES.;_clcs.t.;,~ -Mm.-OVIN-...,-G--. W-~--, -. -,n-, /-:-~: With This Ad * AUCTION * KIM~ ~ aome bkkpQg marine hardwu. A f1nllhel a tempota!y job Bram IC&lea cl.ock ttramica atand, desk, $150. &c* Duncan Phyfe droplee.t table Ftne F\ln:l!tu:e Gw.rdian ~ tb IC.1'Ye u store A recelv· today iro1d ailvu w a t c b e 1 , shelves, $30, dbl. hide-a-bed ~ Old woodl'tl rocker $~ & ~Uance. Major ~ development ttrm ~ 12311 Q)apnan Ave. Ina clerk. Apply ln penon, I.nterwn;: 9-12 56-075.1. Stl;; oriental brau table. 1 drawer desk wtchair Si!i'. AuctlonA ~. 1:30 p.m. hU lmrnedlate Optnlna:• tor Suke ih Garden Grove uao Shipyard, 900 Udo We Need AU LEAVING area. Rlllns an-$25. Snorkel mask It ftnl, 9 drawc.or dre8scr w/mtrror Windy 1 1 Auction Barn lt!C.Tetarltt w/1ui.tantial 638-7320 Parle Dr., Newport Beach. Ottl.ce Skil11 ti~ decorator Item& .t: never UJed $.l); ¥!9c. ladiei $45, ltrtsc. USED USADL£S, 2075~ Newport, CM 64&-81686 f'X?ef. ln tt1fl t I e Id of SERVICE Sta M STUDENTS, •= now for Equal ()ppor. Etti.~·er pal.nttngl. lrvlM . Ca 11 clothing a 12 A 13, much 2560 Newport Blw.1 Costa Behlnd Ton.y'1 IDda Mat'l. sl.les/mlctusl fih&nce public ~ Smoa lie ~~~-p/time conce Jobi. $2 w!'!~r! ~i~ I~. 59-7673 wkdya or eVtt. more. 64&-6140 lttesa. 1\Kos thru ~t. Display props including an- relMiont or eaa! ..e<I eotate • .:., 1 1 • ·-· hr. Over 17. M.S:. T&lt, DAVENPORTS: c u • tom -.-------------tlque ,10.-, old •--hioned •--•-und Sh 80 -J nea n appear. _...+ 838-1186 bef noon 4007 MacArthur Blvd. I02 de hed d rts ----~-v...-uu .......... v • w.p.m., per mo to at.art Applx • Newport Beach Appll1ncH ~ lo:tc d-~npobo!d ~ATE Sale: Quality An-tank commode in working typm, 70 w.p.m. Must have morns 2590 Newport Blvd STUDENT, Mother's helper, 54().0325 quilted •pr 1 n t. beige hques & Objects D'Al1. condition. Old porcelain lood public A: telephone per. CM ' '' oceuslonal child care; pt. F.qual Oppor. Employer FREIGllT Damage Sa1e, baci.....-/beaut. cond, S3Xl Byzantine !cOna, l-lawkes hand painted tub. ll counter D*llty, Elccellent worklng time. N'pt Beach. 644-8280 wuhen, dryera, re~, for ... ;..,;;;; or $135. each. crystal, Chu'lese _leak"'"OOd cablne~. 3 x S' on cru1ten:. condldoni. benefit•. Service Station NHcls SURVEY work in NB, work TYPIST ::,h=~~Re~n! Laguna 4S4-fm2 ch11.lrs, sterling silver, oil ~~:::b~ fn;gat~~~t~tff C•ll Mn. Fl1lder EXP. MAN. Good Pay. Per· 4 hrl per day on s~ for lmmed. long tenn temp as-$39.95, Beach Qty Ap-. paintings, sculpture & much Dr. 5<18--3303 644mtf..12PM lOOTi~.~~~~OIL, :~~&-:i;°Zs~M.A: ~pl;; .• ~~ ~11•8~E.~H=· ~ m;~~l~]~;;eT '°F='RT°'.""Sal""'v=ag=:e-.~N~e-w-.,~.d~,-w~Rlk ! In ~· w I m;:a -.. Beaut. D•Yenporf, bike SlO. Tove, lamps, lawn THI IRVINE CO. PY person -., e Ovorlood KENMORE ps 11ry<r ~. Exctllont Cond. $40. >UJJ """""'"" "" De!°"'' mo'"'· ,.;.; & used SERVICE Sta. Attendants. 1 Coaat Hwy, NB. Equal Op-atainleu steel 220 wit .1-B edw model W Blu.rts. Gold coJor, I Ing dis ud Equal Opp;>r. Employer Full It 1 p/tim~. Neat ln portunlty Employer. • Offic. builttn range $10, new car--ro ay ~ condition & deaned. A ~:~~. rUany h:J;er slte~~~ appear.ApCan! train lh2590al!i * SEWING MACH IN E 372:3 ~~·· NB rter IJ,(O) BTU upOow fore-Costa Mita ~ ~~. Approx. In yds. Thu.rs-Sun. 1().5, 546-4903. man. PY morns. OPERATORS, swim wear. ed air tuma.ce $85. all ~wk ~ -.N. ....a.u for de t a I I a . 3158 Sicily CM Newport Blvd., C.M. 3760 Campua Dr., N.B. TYPISI'/Proof Re ad er perfect. Call 979-6630 =673-~3730~·;_ _____ ~.,~usr=""s."'u'°..,.=7~'-co~!iec~l!o~n. 2 SERVICE Sta. Attendants 1 540-4511. P/tlme. Good s p e 11 t n g tl1AYTAG & Kenm ore SOLID Birch dln. rm aet, ~ FR/place aet & gas log $25. l\1oclel 12 Shot gun, 1900-22 Major land development rtrm run le 1 p/Ume. Lite mech euenlia.I. Apply in penon, Wuhers $40. Kenmore 600 chrs &: china ca.bl.net $3)). 9 Signature wsh/dry Cprtono Cal. rifie. Lark tent trailer, bu inllnedlate openh1a9 tor exper. Apply Laguna Technicl PeDJ'0'S3ver, 1545 Newport Washer $65. Whirlpool gu couch A loveseat $100. 3 $100. 2 oil pntngs $35 ea. Valued $100>, Sl'U $800. l-lunt- Socrotorlos-P /limo Mu1lc•l ln1Wumentt BOGEN P.A. amp. 60 watt, use wlhorns or irpMken. Any ohms $100. or wlll trade tor comparable electrlctJ JUltar or but. 841-4TI'2. Y AM.AflA FG-180 aooU9tic9.I guitar. w/hard lheU cue. Both xlnt. sno. J 1 m -· MUST sell! Double 8e1 Sllngor<and """"'· r.m ~ best offer. 640-0168 Plono $175, good cond 979--325.5 or 979--1461 Office Furnltur•/ Equip. 824 3 OLYMPIA typeWrllets, heavy duty, elec. 13" car- riage, fabric/carbon ribbon, 10 pitch, 6 mo. old. Sell new $550, \\•ill sell tor $300 ea. 516-4900. EXEC S\\>Vl chrs SlS/25 Sec chrs $8/24 Desks $.al/90 Pie1·ce 861 \Y 19 0..1 642-3408 Piano1/0rgan1 826 .. ART.TIME ~·n~chS. Cout Hwy, an Blvd., C.M. dryer $30. Guar., " tree t"'t~1barcon:itoo1~ K•nnedy tool box & mach Ing dog•, 6 wla old. ~ .... a pc& • PERTEC offers permanent T Y P I ST w I b ~ k p n i delivery. 5 4 6 -8 6 7 2 or , · tools SlOO. 10 No. Co2 fire 545--0266 SECRETARIES SERVICE Sta. Attendant employment, paid vacationa bacqround. Pref. ah, not 847-81l.5 aft. s. ext $25. All firm 250l ~AUTO==MA=T=l~C-G~A~R~A~G~E Free Oroan Lessons . aftem & eves. Over 18 Mu.st after 6 months, plus one reqd, Penn. full time. -Ront Wo-L-n/Dryorl KING headboard, tr 1 p I e Orange, Cl\1. DOOR OPENER. F1·-,1 •r. be A pl 3190 H 00 k Id u u t Public Accountant& OttJce w.. dttsser, mirror, nigh tl'M"o"vc"""-:,--.,.,,--,----·~ exper. P y ar r ne pa. me o a 5J6...21'.Hi7 536-3193 $2. Wk. Full malnt. 11lands, S drawer chest, dark to mobile home, no known brand. Reg. $200. A s long As You Llic.11 Blvd., CM Chriatmas, company paid • • * 639-l202 * geen & gold $100 2 royal rm for 2 blue/gm chrs, Special $1 3 9 . 9 5 installed SERVICE Sta. Nlte Manager We, bolpltal, au r r I c a 1 WAlTRESSES • 21 )Tl or blue barrel cluura: $15. ea, S75/both, 17 cu., ft. kiln, w/5 yr guar. 893-3577 or Non·pla.yen &:: playeni Ml· -.~ ., " ' -~ • 1 • • l \ • Sh !O w.p.m. Typing 10 w.p.m. Must have good pubUc le telephone penonallty. Excellent work· ~ condltlonL w/mech. exper, Apply in medical and dental benefita older no experience 10 CUBIC fool refrigerator desk 15 557 CM7 $175. J:Ox48 nurror $30. 530-1415. come to attend Tuesday pen H r Cllevron 'Nith excellent worklne con-nectuary, just a lot ot $46. Mot.or 1 year Old bet ' .....,.. Rotisserie $15. Vacuu.m $10. = .. =o'=RAP'°"E=R=Y~F=A~B~RJ~c=.~. -1 night a t 7:30 PM. We want /, ~~rlstolµ. ' dltions and growth poten· ~~~! Com P..! !.et! Sam & aft 6:30pm, 847-4871 SOlJD bec!Salem .. ~a1 p!de twln All nr. new. 5.JG-8964 27.000 Yards lst's ~.C'r/i::;,.nt1o Alllearn m~J~ Coll Mrs. Fltldor 6443319 tlal. .............. ll!i n, 1tore. U't't--.,..i. LADY Kenmore elec. dryer, poster s, C•-=, reuer, ·o-· ,...... SERVICE station Cd M . 210 Newport Center Dr., near new. Xlnt c 0 n d . mtm>r & night stand $500. MUST tell, Stud io bed rm set Special Mill Purchase furn ished. I area. Out of the smog. Ex· TEST N.B. 55!-334&. Maple cbalr & rocker $2S $125. 4 Chrome rims $20. $2.00 • $7.50 value Y.i price Tom Dieterich • in charge. • 1 THI IRVINE CO. per. at1endant wanted . each. Dinette, 5 chairs $35. walking exercl~ Mach. $40. 1510 E. Edinger, SA. 541-2080 Phone 642-2151 "l Phone 613--881.8. for appt. WAITRESS -dining room. WASHER* DRYER 646-m& aft. 4. 645-4039 COPPERTONE Ref & g., COAST MUSIC TECHNICIAN Housewife needed to work "'rtabi• D!lhwuber l"'°~=-~~=~-F.qual Oppor. Employer SERVICE Station Help. Full 15 hn W wk. No ex-$50 each * 64&-5848 MED IT ERRANIAN bar 3 PIECE aectional S25. Water range, like new, 2 Kitchen Newport Blvd. at Harbor I '•""'""""'""''""""""'""' or p/tlme. 990 E. Coalt · $2 25 br San !ftools, round 3' Hatch table, softener, never used $80. sets, one is maple. 2 Co~a Mesa I 1· Hwy, Newport Bch. REQUIRES mlnlmwn of one =e~ 6ub, b-/:. REFRIGERATOR $50. Oean Many misc. Jtems. BuUer, Metal bed trame $2.50 ~~!~~~ twin b eds , Socretory-5upor lxtc •·rv!ew call "'~ll6L Call 557....., alter 3 pm. Alpoca rug, band carv.d, l Camper pot 15. 54ihll68 ~~ PIANOS -ORG•u5 ·' Should all SHIPPING CLERK year experience performina; ..., ;n;r HUIT)'' """ 'I poue11 required tun c t lo n tests and w~ over 21, needed • of a ~ headboard A: foot PAT10 umbrella. BI u e MOVING! Must Sell! '70 Ne\v & Used. Great selection. ~ln&lkiJh t!:::t. Plilme. S2.50 hr. Exper. troubleshooting of electronic Wed-Sat Ltmcb. I: dinner gd UKE new wuher I: dryer board~ a. bed. 673-3036 w/wtrlte fringe. !.«. s.z. Dishwasher, '70 gas dryer, Competetlve prices. Open 1 Must be quaJwea, In· 642-3472. digital equipment. benefitlii, Please apply In $ISO. Call~ pm, REMODELJNG • Bdrm Rt, Crank handle. Like new $25. crib, '6:2 HoDda 150. Odds, Eves. A: Sundays. The best telllgent and ftll rroomed. SNACK Bat Girl, must be IN penon, from JD.lD 979--6235 llvtng rm aet. long glass top ,,sn=-5966c-c:;,.,· .,,,..--,..---,..,.--~e-nds~, ~-·-----deals a.re always a t: Able tn accept responslhil· neat in appear. le be avail. ENGINEER G ask for Nick. 3709 S. B:Utol, FRIGIDAIRE relrlgerator. coffee tbl, end thla, lam111. LINK chain I u r n i t u r e WARD 'S power mower, 5 Wallichs Music City Ides in exctwi.ae for ex-betwn 8 am It 5 pm. Plnae S.A. Runs well $.15. 67J--4266 after hanging lamp & mlsc. Hou.tebold items, Records: mo. old. Paid $90. Sell $45. South Coast Plaza 540-2Q) .. ctllent &alary pl.us frinp call 644-2000. TECHN1c••U w~ all 6. 645-0341., books, etc., Call &It 3, 673-0886 after 6. .... bmetltl. All races welcome Uln ab.ifts available. Appiy ln KENMORE pa stove; workl LOVELY burnt or an g e ~n45 EXERCY'CLE • Westtngbouse ( ~ to apply. F.qu&I opportunity STOCK CLERK pel'80D. 3099 S. Briltol, CM. a:ood I:~~ mndttlon.IJ09 velvet hi.:_~~tabl90! · ~~:'s'~A~CRIF==,-d~ilhe~s-.-mi--a-p-elec mtr weight adj cycl-KJ~{~ ~~~~ =:: empMJyer, ~ Mr. Morri-IMMEDIATE opening for VandeKamp's, A divtaion ot -· ,,_,.... agon couuuuue e, <MU~ pllances linens tools patio Ing selector (213) 592-1785 · h · lnl $200 llXI, 568-0921 technician with digital In· 1iny Nayk>r's. G•a tfo¥1 •lmost new fin. $30. Xlnt cond. 60--:m?. tum, ~ry gd 1 cond . .' reas. GAME table fonnica 48" &!m t~~ over&¥· prnai.1 SIC'YS & BKkPRS ~boxbilla ~~~~I ~er:~edg r ~~J . ~o~ 1 'w""°AITRESS===""won-~tad~,--part-$100 * 5fl6.8fii2 ~O~ bdrm aet, 5 P~. 644-6199 round four dlairs $50. 537-4547 1 ! Gret.t variety: lh/no sh I"" ea, ,.....,."'" "1ru·R:'ll IX ti.me or split. Coaches t · FOR aa!e sml gu stove & 644--2927 CdM flSOIER Baby Grand, dark Gen'l, Sates, Land Dev, Mkt re-stocldng. ~. ~.1 • ~,.!~~~~u~-C'.orner, 3333 So. Briltol, _!ulldinf Mater1•l1 a 540-0l01 ~n ~'i .~.,,!',..!'~ o"'RE"'=SSER=="w=/c-nurro~.-~-.~!o-ng~& walnut -decorative. Xln1 ~I t ·~·--~· ,._.,._ nd h k 1 tar C.M. So Cout Plaza, ,...., ~~ naITOw $50 Encyc o~!as cond. riui, or su.bmlt otte T sm o c ~ Call For Appt. a c ec ou compu 546-1955 e Surplus. lullclfng Glrage S.11 112 Eves or 639-6472 Days · ..,...,,. ' ,.,....., REI FREE FREE Industrla1 Reb :t!ona peripheral equipme nt . W MATERIAL -1000'• Of NEW M FIRM 6, x 40., robber mat-good cond. SlOO. 545-3200. 552-9455 lJz Reinders Agency · Duties Include lab testina of AITRESS wanted, on a;ra.ve ITEMS' Doon lwnber ply. OVING into Mobile Horne tress new 11 cost 18 .. B/W CARPEi'; 100 yds, nylon, Upright Grand Pl•M -4121 Westerly Place (714) 494-9401 ena:~a: docwnentatlon. yard lhlft. Apply att 10:00 ' • • must sell elect dryer $20 711 • Antique Gold, ht·lo. Excel £42..5643 S\dte U.5: !!! ... OR &3-8190 TB.ONIC =l~:a':i TwToL°-~I; f i~ nra~ ~~~ ~~!ic~' mold-= ~~~ ~S:~1 s:i ~ $25. camper 631 Victoria cond. Best otter. 837-«DS. EMERSON Baby Grand ..,c.1n1 loilc pro 10 1 ype 1 and WAITRESS a: dishwuber for BUILDER~ SURPLUS $40. Blue 4 Postei-Trundlel'SA""f'i=TF"ICE-="'Klng,,.-~bed,.-,-,.-t Miscellaneous Piano. Good condition $325. ~AT~~~ y INDUSTRIES maintenance of clrcuill ln coffee shop at 2633 w. Cout ~ So. Main St., S.A. bed w/matching chest $125. velvet sprd & matching W1nted 820 or be9t otter. Call f.94-4861 at ,..,,.__AL • L--... a..ch addition to a;eile:ral elec-Hwy, Newport Beach. Call Mon thru Sat lG-5 Sewing Mach $10. Record hdbrd. 1 yr, $100 644--7153 \VANTED: Engi·ne and Sewing Machines 828 ..........,_, -......... tronlcs. Requires at leut 2 642--8415 from 7 AM-BPM. n4: St&-1032 player $5. Loll of books. Eves. , noN MOW. l'hh St., C.M. ll:tltal Oppor. Employer years ot applicable ex-WAITRESS & kitchen help. Furniture 110 »i4 Donny Brook C.M''LA~WN~~Ed~g-e-,-. -Se-,-,.,.-e-l_ectr!_c ~tom~c~~~~ c~f SINGER portable touch it i l'CLASSIFIEDjiljijiiii~wU~l~"'ijil!i!ti! iiiiii.i-;:::::=::-=-~1 perlence and 2 years educa-Full &: part time. Penguin ---------~ll89. new $35, call 963-3113 atter Must be in good shape. sew. Zig Zag + ma.Df-" • II t Io n a I e I e e t r o n I c a 1wtalt Shop, 981 s. Coast PAIR of blue velvet Barn! CEMENT Mixer S75. Radial 6 p.m. Reasonable. 963-4971 ,decorative stitches 1 YI' sc · 40" Delwc, 6 bumers, 2 rewinding} best otter 2 IX \Vant ten sy=us, man's 6 · 1 · bahoolckground beyond high Hwy. Laguna. 494-1JS3 chn, $150. O'Kede r&n.a:e ann saw (motor needsl-~M-O_VIN_G_"_STO __ RA_G_E_ WE ......ii guarantee. $150. S57-2413 al!' ,. SR. TEST O\lenl, 2 i.ouera $175. Mini Bikes, 4 hp, $80 ' ea. U>owest rates ln area and woman's in good cood. "Make Rooni P'or Daddy'' Wanted 615-7465 Ping Pong table StS. Cam-968-4765 213-592-2!61. ••. clean out the prage lm-...1:....lu 1-6 DRAWER Ir: mi:rror., 1·9 Pinc equip., clothing &: YOU benefit more for much CHILDRENS play ho u a e .•. tum that junk into cub J TECHNICIAN ,,~, .... , drawer drewr Ir mbTor, 1~ mllc, 531-8788 less • Corona de! Mar Ten-wanted, please phone , 'Nitb a Daily Pilot O•altied-I' antique French prov. chest GARAGE Sale, Tues thru nil Cub. 673-6nl. 5'4-8874. ad. Call 6d-5618.. _ ' . • WAnRESSES & mln-or, l !1. antlquo coo-Fri. tools, pwr tools, eydr. Motor Homo& Motor Hom°' Motor Homw j'i For on od In Womon'1 W0<lcl Coll Miry loth 642-5678, oxt. 330 !THIS IS A e BUSBOYS ner cabinet, iampL 536-al65 Jaclc, Jack slnd, beds"' ""liS~o~loi/R~ointi~ii940i;;'";lio/jR;onitiiii9i40ilS.iloiliRoinitiii'°"~, f CHALLENGING " Musr .. u: 8' Walnut stereo cesa., kit Uien.!b, oilver, •' console $500. Walnut, Teak V.W. parts, furniture, refrig ~· INTERESTING JOBI Apply 2-5 PM & Cane din. oet $400. Walnut & """'· Oieap. 2 3 511 I I WIIL test, calibrate, trouble 'I'w!9, Wed Ir Thursday coffee & end tbl $1Z. Misc. Trevieo, Laguna Hills. shoot and repair computer No Phone calls Please 644-1384. GARAGE SALE 968-5497 A Happy Time 9476 . SIZES 1011.t-2011.t "" 11f Mi..., 11f td- HA VE A HAPPY TIME at luncheons, lectures, parties, wherever >"" go In lhi• skimmer with pr1nceu lines that peak interestlngly lft. the to~nted Pattern 9476: Half -111\0 1211, 14\1, 16\1, ~ l>\I. 0Si>l l4\0 (bull 3T) .... 2 !It yardo 54.1nch. 1 U:f&flll•ttV-' ~ __ pa_n_H eee w each pattern for .Air 11111 and Spiclll --.... -... tb1fd.clul -will---~tllll~AIL~ = 411.' -Dept., ,., -Ulit St., -Tari!. N.Y. 10011. Prllll .... --~-=-and ftn.11 -~ Q•lo--and--""" --CltaJor. All li.JNO BOOK ...,-..,, WIG' k>l•iOWo ... llllTANT FASHION BOOK -H-of 1u1i1oo !act.. SL For that !tom ..-$111, tr> the 1'<11113' -· output micro film &)'Items. Kelty'• Prime Ste•k• MAPLE dining room .et. $8>. Furniture ~ all kinda, cloth· &cqround in digital cir--Polm N B Brown couch, 80'', $50. 2 inc. ~. pi ct u re 1 , Piiiow News! cultry (preferably TrL in· "'" ' • • lounge chairs, $10. Corner odds &: ends. 21381 Pinetree tegrated cln:ults), power I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""" group, $40. • Refrtg. $25. Call Ln .. (Bulbard It Hamlltm) ~ supplies, CRT deflection cir-WHO WANTS TO WORK? 53&-5029 RB cuits, CRT control circuits DRIVE A CAB! MEDITERRANEAN couch R UMMAGE Sale-Fountain and .erw ctrcults helpful. CHOOSE your hours, wart $65. New fru.ttwood coffee Valley Womans C 1 u b, 2 yeen form.al tn.1nlnr pl.us ror yoonelf. be your own table, end tables $1SO. 2 Warner at Magnolla, Thurs. 3-s years experlence, bou. Men Cll' women. Can ceramic lamps $15. each ~Aug~"'30th-:=~· 11~-<,,_pm"'=: ,_--=,.,. Apply or Contact be : handicapped. 556-8324 GARAGE Sale Thurs.-Frl.· <n4> ~ ~:: ~Uted. ~a.r::;;, LIKE new couch '50: 9x1.2 SaL 9 a.m. til 6 p.m. lSl62 PERTEC Supplement your incomt'. floral rug $65: coffee A side Lafayette St., Westmimrter. Drive a cab 6 hn or more a table $20; Must sell before Jewelry 115 day. AppQ< in penon, 911. 646-DS DEPT. O.P. Yellow cab())., 186 E. 16th 10' COUCH, xlnt cond. Must BUSINESS SYSTEMS St., Costa Mesa. 11@11 SlOO or beat offer. 1Tll2 Armatrona: Avenue M0-4481 bet 7:Xl a..m.· •---•·· ~"' WOMAN over 30, busy Dell, 5 pm·-~·-._., ... .ru-, ............ a.ta Meta, knowledge of .... .....,.,.. •GENEROUS • •REWARD• Irvine IndUltrlal Oxnplex Italian tood he Ip f u l . CORNER groop w/table 6: An equal opportunity CU.Slomer service. Use of bolsters. Extra ftrm mat-For' return or any Ul· empklyer slicers. & food hanctu.. tress, Uke new. $ 1 S • formation leading to return l!-~~~~~!l!!!!!!!!!!!!"' I Must want to work, dutlo m-1187 of a gold four leaf clover TELEPHONE answering are Tues·FrL 9am-3:30pm. SPANISH couch Xlnt cond. pin, approx. 2 inches in ;.,~~are~ Pera tor For appt, SoD-1252 Grn & beige. Orig, $XI(). diameter, with i ewe led 892-l%1.2 WOMAN 40-55, 6-8 hrs from Sac. $30. 556-833(" eves. horseshoe In center: al90, ---------3:30pm. Give & take orders 557-4440 days a;old locket (wu on chain), The Balboa & info on phone. No sales. B"AR:C,.C-!C'!gh""'t "'w"ood'--,--.,-,"toi_ni_n!~c-a· I approx. the size of a nickel, St. $1.65 hr. Training period. Louver doors, ideal for den. iucrlbed in ICJ'lpt, FLA. lay Club Nr Hnng Hosp. 646-4071 37.. high,. 56.. wllk. SJ'JS, These are deeply treaaurod lOllm.·lOpm. 548-7~ tamlly memento..: &:""the loQ is Now Acceptlnc Appl..lcatlons For MAIDS & PORTERS For Tho ()penlnii OI Our New Guest Units ls in'eplaceable. PLEASE, W011-IAN wanted for babysit· DOVER Shores Home turn. PLEASE help if you have ting, llte Ownduties, lateNa1· for u.Ie, couch, chrs, din any tntannation -642-3589 ternoons. transp. on-set, hutch, pi c tu re 1 , Eves. 14 weekends. smoker prerd. Sl h r . Gt&-a:l64 557-T.n.8 betwn lOam 11: 1 ,,,~-==· =---,.,--:-::: Mlscell1neou1 818 noon. W AUllJT U aun cabinet $15. WO~IAN ror part time otftce Walnut Zenith ltertO :m. * PICASSO, DAU, OI'HER k, ing&: «9 W l.oYe Seat, ~. tables, GRAPHICS. PVT. PI'Y. a:. Cos~resa: ' cheap, 49'J.-4'155. MUST SELL! 535-6595 Apply Monday thru Friday YOUNG man dependable, ID!' l"-:O'""'SEC='==11=o°"NC,AL~$250;=:-, --,-.,,, 1 •10 175 CB Honda, 800 ml, '10 9 Altf.J:30 PM residential deaning A ~ recllnl'r chf.lr, $60. Opel GT, '62 Olds 88, must Gay appllque' pillows are P1rSOM1I Office maintenance. (Carpeta, wtn. sell, 979-3958. tun to pile on aofa or bed. 1221 W. Coa1t Hwy. dows & floors) Ex:p. or * COU~& ~~~ * ~.LL :1 ~Uer . Quickie pillow pair! Vl~kl Newport •--ch trainee. 675-'655 nevtTU all bo' ~1910 · nllqUo• ·-_._•er ms. solid color appllque t s .,.. Fat Profit is attained when IN Y me. "°°' ~ outstanding against floo.ver-------you sell through result-get-8' DAVENPORT, w h I te PENN 500 reel-pole $16, cust print iround. 01oo1e low-coat TRAINEES ting Dally Pilot Claaslfled naUgahydc xtnt condition. surf pole.reel $Ill., tackle cottons. Pattern 7350: a[. WUl train depend&ble women -:•;:d:•·,,&12-56=::=18;:====:...::Cai=! =-=======-''-=box=l8=. =548-=9832=·==== pl!q~e pattern piece~, 1 to becom! tn~ molding -·-~ plllow1. M h rr.:;:;;;:a.:!":=:-::::--:::-:::::::;:~:::;'1\1 SEVF.NTY·nV~ CENTS operators. ust ave own "&' ... for ••ch pattecn • add 25 car, be able to stand entire STAR. GAZER:,·~¥. cents tor each pattern for llhlf't & ~ able to work '7.::r---I'1a.Ar1oQWN----r~::·~-ll'-I Air Mall and Special Hand.I· ~ il necessary. -;: II:' 1111: otherwise lhiN-claao Openin&> on Da,ohilt ($1.96 M y,.. Doll)'-C.U. 'f. delivery wW take thref to start), SWl.na: lhUt ($2.08 T .Accwcfhl9 t. tit. Stirn. weekl: or more-. Send ' to to lhtl) .A: graveyard lfllft To dMqt n-. for Thursday, Allot Blulka, tho DAILY ():1.23 to lltarl). RliR In 30 --... 1-ICllngiorul'i>oos Pit.OT. 105, Noedlecnll ~. cif)OUrZodlocblnlul~ Dept., Box 163, Old Cbelsea Apply ll am-4 pm I &it9'lalft J1 (-a Statton, New Yodc, N.Y. * Oranle Cot.It Plutlet '* 2Yow J2...,_. 10011. Prlnt"lfame. AMrwl. irl(l West 18th St. ~~I 11 t ~=..... Gi>!_Pat&en Ma1W. Costa Mesa, C&llf. 5Jlro9JM 35,.,_.,... N EE D L ECftAFT 'T2! · • ._.. :16frlend Clochet knit etc. ,.... TRAINEIS ::_ ~:::., db«tk>nl. 50c. Immtd. opntlnra for women ,•1:,.. 39..,~ ....... ...._ Bo*. on all ahlfta: Accept!nc tx· ..- 8ulc, $1~ lmDtl. pat· per. moldlni mach oprs .A: ii~ ~= tetua. • · tff,lnet!s Cean Ute work ln IJT"' 43.Aind i.ea.t QoeMt ... -. Sh!ft1 ~-~ . """-':.. ,...,___ IAoftl IZi_ _. __ , Pat· new hid&.. ....... ... Pf'lm· '' .... M _..._ _ .. .-.·--tor. nltt work. Onmr, for 1$To 4SW- -·-.. .:;!:r .. -. l•Glt ... "' ow , ........... OU'I .... adbevnella~nt A xtn t frlnp 17 v.... 410.. ----"'~~~ " ,,_ •---~ "Sltiltl' Tom-3pm, 3pm-Upm, 1n,. ..,,,_,, p.cn llpm--1am 20._. S>Lioct!r sf:•1••• _.... 8lolr • Calltomia InJ. Mo1dln& ~~ :~:r-' 11' o1ir,_ •·• Boob , $Oc, 200 Brlln Ave. 2l YNI 53 lvd v ~ ,--. Colta;A!esa 2AO.W.. MP'-" ~If IS PIW~· (lrvtne lndUJ. Complex) ~= g:~ -- 1 -11 Po-TIT!'OR & typlll-M\lst ellloY ,, ... >7 Yw !IOc. cblldrtft. Cbuld do tome 2' ,_, ,. "" -Qld1I -I • typ~ your horn<. Pay ~:':.... :::i: liOc. nol h to llart. B Clodc, .0. /0\ Qotilo I• r.dlf• U,... · P.O. 711, Oolla ...... 1\.210ool 181~ 9111 20' MOTOR·HOME Roadliner by Redman f ' i hmw ....... wlllt ....... blttiroon\, flll'Mce. O.Q.H, t .. , OCldee ~ V-4. ~lie tri~ $10W1r 1tMrlng, dbc lnkes. lllt ....... dull rMf" ...... 9'lctlwllc llN- llon. ORpEll YOUR& TOMYI . 556·88 $688 Down $74 Mo. Ule lt tot&I an. pyml. 17~ r1 to11t 11'\0. pyrnt, Ind. ta'I(, ncen.. & •II c&rrvfl\l-d'll11119 °" •POI'. crKl!t Mr 120 rnorith1. DderrM p1ymenl prl<I nsw.6t Intl, 1111 I. llc.n1•. ANNUAL. ~EltCENTAG! RAT~ 10.tnlo 28' MOTORHOME Roadliner by Redman Dod91 '4'40 chassis, V-8, •utomatic trans. •' mission, plus full factory equipped. (S20· 3003851 :.If , 5 7988 ·1 20' MINI • MOTORHOME Fling by Rodman JbO c11, in. Dod9e V-1 1ngl111, •11to. tr•nt., -4 liurn- •r r1119t, btthroom, dtul rt1r wh1el1 , b1ttt"I' ''"' "'•rt•r, power 1fttri119, pow•r br•k11. IF20S·2· 081 1) 55688 $688 Down $74 a Mo. ... ,,, IOI&! dn, pymt. 17~ 11 totll -. "'"!. Incl. tu, 1ic..." all ttrrvlnl ctM,... °" 1ppr, crsilt for• 10 mo!lll'll.. DettnW Pl'l'mtnl fll'lol tHW..0 ltld. '-X • lkt!IM. ANNUAL. l'l ltCllNTAG! llAlE "·"" ' • • • > . ' ~ • ~ ... , r'li.Ui _Jotsday, AU9Uil 2-l, l~/3 l!§J I .. ,,f •11 !~ ! ,r......... ][I 1 ,.....,.. ,,." ·!!F I ~··,._. ~~ ~ ~ 1 ...:.."'"=~~ ~I ~· ·l~ 1· 1~--~. ;;;;;;;;;8;30~1-TV, R1dio, Hif i, 3 Linea, 3 lflmea, $2.00 n... HorH1 156 looh, Gefter1I 900 •--~~'--906 Boals, Sl~/lloc(lj' ,'1f1:,._~~ll(~,...~;11;;;,:~ 1~Sparjt.._._1,..~G""o"'o""d.;..•_...o....;.i Stereo 836 =-' 154 -11, ...._. . •. , -~, 1 }'1/1-L °"'Goll clulxi. like nu --------B~~~io 11to~ ~: y~h e PUPPY WORLD e 5 YR. Old thoro~. Well "':'BOAT \'!AXING * FANTASTIC 18UY 'tr BOAT• ~·. ~:"" t • ·'-"k"-:oe;":':tw"n~::-~~ +nu'!'~~r-~ii.:n1~~vc~~~~: Love• kida. ~1 or EN.GLISH Bll1l mix, ~~e:t!!·.::~~~~·~1zrn;~; A~FT.OPEN·DAYCRUIS.1 ~°'846-¥8 1 ·1 * ~iCV~J.l l 111 black & white TV I: stereos ~ Odhuahuas, A m e r 1 can m i & tack. Will trade for !? ~1451 ER, Inboard 318 cu/ln. DOCK for rent, power oniyJ Nl."W 10 i>t)E!Eo IT FLY ~ fee.tbcr kit $10. in So: Calif. Priced Jess PEAO!Es ls peaohy keen Eskimo (Spit:), Pit Bu.Us See al No 42, IRV Esq, , Quoyaler V-8, bucket seats Up to 26'. Newport ~! ~YCLES~.~ Tackle box $8., pole It reels 'than the d;..,...,.,.,ters w/3 \ Greyhound, Bull Temer,_ ... -.·-· 61" _........ 15 Ol.Tl'BOARD w/4) hp tJull st.emJe&t 30 -1 w· ·-_, 6"" """" I m,.;.,d!!.. r , $5-$10-$15. S48-.98.12. ........... yr she i. a rell-llve do.U K1t· T...cup Poodles, I ta flan -' ,_., ----EVintiiCfe".-1300~or BEST 1 ~""'"_,_, ---ia40wy.-,,,....,_,,-1, • '...-w. ns2 <it'-i!iiiift! ~~~--~---! ~ture 'M~ 17f ~11: ~ ten, box trn'd velvet claw• Greyhound, Bull TerTier, • BARCAJN $1000, Reg. OFFER.·~. fi:~Pl~ eq t!;; BOAT alip, up to tO' ml· ~~~~awl: · TV R d f Hlff atock~;T.l models pric!t tO 6.fJ...1534 Cockapoo. 100 ?.f Ix ED TB Celdine" g yrs. 1or $3$. BO.ts Maint / bUi'e pwnps btlge bklwer: Batbba. Coves. Avail .Stpt ;;.~~'7.;:;;\~,,:.-= ,$'1-.. ' o, . , ••.a clear. Cash 90 plan.oo ·---_FRAZ!ER'a look-a-like is a PUPS!! Stud Service Most Bt>aut. markings. Gentle S , • , _.. , bom , ........ 'uv battery ·+1 l.st. $66. mo. 557-0308 1.. i '69 ON~~ Ch>MMlitl , ~ ._ ~ .. ~ U "-·'-OPEN E" ES 838-2646 erv1ce,. '"'"' • ,......-SLlP I W N~ mlle1. ....,_hr. J,Moit to 36 mo. ABC Color TVi· gen eman kitten & Ml ~ ui:"·"'-'U6· , : • · , , . tuJt .boat COVl!r, lour SCOC>P , or rent est ,::~r.-~ Bt•t offer. 'MJ..229e ~, * Sum $ &al * 9021 .Atlanta, or 19o4 6 rteruruOUs box tm'd, vel ve:t &1-5021. APPY mare 9 ¥f!> Gld, show EXPEfl ~t maintenance,' bait t'ank/hee.vy duty trailer.I can accommodate 40, ~ Aak too BotrParti. 111 ·l\el:KJll:';l~tu:C Tube Bro o khunl, Huntington claws 642-1534 AKC Silky TeM'ier Pups. horse winner 1n \Ve11tem painting, varnishing & Asking S6aJO or best ort~r.. boat, $50 mo. 673-6631.,,, Plat.-er Apt: 3, CM • " $17 ~21 ,, or 25._ eoior Beach, 968-3329 or 962-5559. FREE Primo p u p p 1 e s , Starline bred, champ sired. Pleasure & halter. 53&-6846. •general work. Sati.sfactton Call: 842-5980. 8o1t1, Speed & Srd1tl11 * HONDA \ 250 , , * 2 YEAR WARRANTY Lab/Afghan 1.'0mbo, 6 Reduced. $100.SWO. guaranteed. $4 per hr. Call SEl..J.. or trade 24• fishing , condition. RectiitfYaerlt ' weeks, ready & \\'eaned. Odorless, no shedding. 1 ]~ 64~1320 boat xlnt cond OU-shore 16 SKI boat A trailCV 283 C 11 K rf s'i9--'15f9 .J ~1;~al+~~Jo~a1=~ ___ r,.. __ 1•_~_ .. _· _ _,JI S i~~=~! Need home for 2 KEESH~~~ ~7:~ld male. ...::-&:'u•lt t,f Boats/Marin• ~i ~i~~Ji.Fi, ~'3 '~ cond.' ~i F~U; ·~mt.pro;· formerly Mesa North Center . Al ..... -. & · · Equip. 904 ~me ,•1'· • head • ,~: · l'Ull;ll1n& rlOllJ9· campy i B1ck s. of Baker 546-6002 cats, l~a yrs. housebroken. 1 •o....u; papers. AKC , Pl .a, • , i8tK7· Ji]. . 1156 164~ , •• ( 3 Lines, 2 Tl-·1, $2.00 Please call 494-5642 Sl75. or best •oil. 536--0143. Bo G I 900 12 VOLT Bai~ • BU-e T.D .. ft .. · .. ",.. OI' ! f~·iiii:-;j!O"~i>jU!<.'~tft open .,...,, 6 dl.)'1) "-Guard Doe its, anar• "' ,... 61S--8549 ....,..-...... --"--Y~U ~ ' • s TE n E o s AFFECTIONATE 1 yr rust · -Pumps. Close ou , $14.95 ea. ' .. ....,... ... ,_ r • • s"n~ (Bnvo .. ~bew~dl '•• ' male kitty, altered, shots, ALASKAN MALA11.1trl'E SCRAM LETS * 548--03.53' * Boats, $111 909 "' $"50. Helmet ~·t p:ay t;-much 1or a o;~~n ~e~i>!·\~ 0~ box trained 644-0139. AKC p1Jp$, ma I e If em I . • Boats, Power 906 cJul:ted. Xlpt concl. ~ new otereo .,,....,,, We ha.., bdldnr dog. 642·9816.. Sltol>. Wormed. 646-5601. ANSWERS ANNUAL MID su•~-!:'!'amODP~ ~HAN...ioAHUraew"'!: C1mpir1, S1lt/Rtrit.m, N-~ ~~'."' ~ them from $85. Name I~ SILKY Teniers-5 females. No uuou:.i'I. .... , ..... . ..... (J. brands. Check on our prices TRl-<.'Olored collie. Female, I 'LI .,re:s,;,A....,o.Uer refused. Call clearance sale. Fantastic Top CondlOon. ~· Pn : ·n FORD Truck & 11~ 'n, Call eVel; · · " before you buy, A 1 1 to good home. , Ptt1 and..,._ . ri ~ savings on our inventory of 673-1232. Cab-Over Harvest Camper. * '.Wll Ka 'ZS, merchandise La guaranteed, · 54.5-1161 1;·:..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim;;m;; .~=~~=~-~-Giblet .m.•Photo -Yeam -new & used bo.ita. No reas. 12' KORALLE Sall·boat V-8, auto, air, 37,000 ·ml~ Ei:celle•~nli1:Coniiisoii!JJH ~z ~-···. 89• ~1 FOUR e .. tr em e I Y al-\VEI1'-1AP..ANER pups, 9 wks. AcMce -HINGE oflr. refused. Mesa Boat Sloo Ilk a....._....,"., Both like new! $5500. Mu.st 6'f5.6l15. , , c.r-......... -... ~ " old; AKC, wormed & shots. \Vhat a man needs in gar. c t ••= N rt Bl d p, e new . .._............; · 1:0" """! =~~=,,,_-=;--s.n..-n.r fectionate kittens, need good Pets, General 850 Sl50. call: ITI4) """' .. 1.,'). de~ng " a -·t ll'OO. bac~. CM•". e,.r;., "'=. or~ ~-v. " 16342 Woodstock Lane, see to appreciate! .-.-. • "m.rnONIC stereo ~ home. ~5819 anytime. uurOJ ""1 u• ...... ~ ~ Hntgn Beach. _.,,... 8 Pl' i tum table AM/FM tape dk AITENTJON PETS! NE\VFOUNDLAND, ma I e, \vith a llINGE on It 'TI 18, I/O l55 Of\otC, 50 hrs. 1n.t\DE 'TI,~ ' 4 lge t'.ll300oors spkrs. Brand nu S~GER/_Ep,arudre'el, lOShomos, Home aw&)' from home, 2~2 yrs.; needs good home. 11' FIBERGLASS, cathedral lmmac. Compass, 2 props, 18lra' Uy FplylerlngSallhboulalt Xlnand caboyer VcaWmperB for • • cost will aac $l70. 5VUU w "'0 " n. ts. Built just fQr you ! Call 642-5107. hull, skiff/car lop boat. extras. Trlr w/side rails er. an ' · 1 nmnuut · · us or 1 i-&;2-0129 640-18()9 To itOOd _bame. &.uding/groonllng 546-2848 REG:· AKC Sasafras Poodle Foam tloo.tatlon. Asking spare tire, winch, spec. ex: cond. 1213) m-5228 ! _499-3 __ 119 _______ , * BRAND new a udio design KlTI'ENS(&-Wki: old . House j>upp,ies. Al!O Mynah bird $175. Days 494-8572, eve & tendiqg tongue, 96&-0494 FLYiNG" Jr. 14' w/J."Olld tiir" ·C'ycles Bikes ;;;;~;;;;.:;-;:=:&::: stereo . Tuner/speakers. 'brok'en t1Ufty blru;!r: & white Cits 852 that talks. 531-7446. wkJ1ds ~~780.. 16 FT. Fbgls Jlunabout, 120 ~!r e-J.1-:i~ e!!l~2~." Sc~ters , 925 .. ~$225, Must sell $125. 644,e903 ·• , t * MALE IRISH SETTER 'BOSTON Whaler, 13' w/15 outdrive. Trailer, elec. mtr FREE to good home. 6 mos PERS AN Kittens, CFA reg., PUPPIES, $35, Ask tor Rick 1-1/P motor, xlnt cond, $1000 lift, new top & canvas 8' SAIL boat, fully equipped '73 750 HONDA, 9,000 ml. 1'MU:e Room For Daddy" fem. Seaer/Goiden. Spayed beautiful ~hair, vecy best or Darrell, 846-7678. nlso 9~~ HIP niotor less cover. XJnt cond. Call must sell, $175. Pert: cond. $1375/or beSt .of· .•,• • clean out the garage Obed . trained. 494-3245. pedigrees, $50 &: up. DOXIE PUPS. than 10 hrs. $350 Priv parry 644-5592 * ~ * fer. 830-0464 Morn/E• ·~th ~a~yatJ~ ~~ 3~n:,.Ol!;~~ppeyShe. pherd/ * 892-2970 * AKC. soo. each. 673-3438 ·n SIDEWINDER, 85 HP M!PNGA 1dlnglhyl25, fu!IJ.. :189ig· ·n KAWASAKI 175. dese11 .::".:;::r-:;::;,;;;;::~"""""'ilU .....,~., ........ ..-~ \Vhite Elephant Dime-A-Line 213-869-0178 lQ' OPEN Bow, 283 Chev. Out-Board Chrysler, gold & gi:u. · · · '"""""' btke, many extns. Must »ell ad. Call 642-5678. Call 54&-6709 call today M2-0678. Berkley jet, iish/ski 50 bronze. Xlnt cond. $2400. eves/wknda. $375. JinH).W-7901 . Metor Homes Motor Homes Motor Homes MOtor Hom•• mph. New lrg whl trailer. 646-6032. 2212 College No. 1, HOBIE 16. Full race, many TRlilllPH '7.3 Tiger. TOJl)cc, Sele/Rent 9-tc) Sile/Rent 940 Sale/Rent 940 Sale/ Rent 940 Wes, 673-64TI or 64&-3213. C.M. extras. Near new cond. Jim. like new. ·ALL NEW Recreation Vehicles '7 4 PERRIS VALLEY 22' MOTOR HOME :"(OMPLITELY SELF CONTAINED 12 FT. TRAVEL TRAILER! SLEEPS 6, CARPETEO, PANELLED, CABINETS, DOUBLE SINKS, PLUS MUCH MORE . .. Dtmo. MYOYUP52114 .$ ' I ~DY FOR FUN & IMMEDIATE DELIVERY . ' ' • !, f .. ' ' IMMEDIATE DEUVERY COMPLETELY SELF·CONTAINED 18 FT. KEY WEST MOTOR HOME s.io6 ~~NTHLY FM 14 months on our •pprov1I of your crf'Cllt, Tofil a sh pr1c1 ts S699S.9•. Det.,.red Pl)'Tn(Tl l odce Is S'l5'6.06 lno:lud1ng Tex, licens1, end alt fin1nce ch1r~. Annuel pe-rc~t•ve n •le 11 12.16'!1.. Down PIYme<ll rO'QulGed 11 S99S.94. USED R ~V.-VALUES 16' Glasear SKI BOAT 10 hanepower E.,.u1u1d•, inbo•rd c:o1drol1. Complete with tr•iler. The Shape of Today! Sportscoach (!!) SEE IT TODAY-IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 11/z TON FOID CHASSIS FREE Alilana MICROWAVE OYIN wllll P4llf'dl1>N .i 1ny s,.rtKNch BRANO NEW '73 £e'Dor<UIG ll'FOOT 5th WHEEL TRAILER FULLY SELF CONTAINED, SHAG CARPET, 4 BURNER RANGE, AND ALL LUXURY FEATURES. r.11a21211 _$J699 CAMPER SPECIALS ·IRAND NEW 73 8' CABOVER P•neled, C•bin•t, .Sta"•· Sink, dinett•. Compl•I• r•11dy lo o. '73 8' CABOVER SHELL SUPER SPECIAL Carnp1etely e•n•led, li9ht1, ¥•nt1. lde•I far Motorc:yc:I•. 25' CUSTOM fiberglass TI4/67!).6891. . 645--0361 Lyman. FWC-VS, loaded Jack Salmon Sloop 1'4'h '69 YAMAHA 125 Eniho, with equipment. Jmmac. $950. 586-5964 PK. K-l16 street legal, aft 5 WOO. 64&<344 P-CAT '"""" ,.__, * 642-0843 * . .u..7'"UUUU race reaird. '72 SKIPJACK 20'. Open-225 Miµiy extra's/.-prWcr. Trlr. MOTORCYCLE trailer. 3 OMC. Under 100 hn. Traller w/storage box. 645-1651. rail, heavy duly. All 'Mred, & extras. Xlnt con d . S150. or best offer. 968.7317 TI4/494-7901. LIDO 14, like new, rm.lier, cover, No. 3509. $1200. 1970 Cl.r450 Honda, fine LET us sell your trailenble ...,., .,..,... d ~-~• E rond -o.>.r.. ...... ay, ", ...... , ...., ves. · .,...,... • fiberglass boat. For fast , 919-4150 resu1ts call Mesa Boat VENTURE ZI, outboard, Center, 6f6..,6269 nr 646-ffi39. trailer, 3 sails. Ready to· 1973 HONDA SL 350 ONLY sail. (TI4l 84tNl34 tlfl 5 liiOO ~TILES $700 25' TROJAN, only 170 hrs. * ~1497 * Best offer over $400). Ex VINTAGE 14' Hobie. Sall No. , cond. 673-1849 352. Xl nt cond. $850. dli.ys * 27' QIRIS Craft, 1968, 10' 644-8838, eves 673-7214 beam. Super clean, many 1,11 INTER.ES'( in Col'Oll8.do extras. Make offer. 6'B..ss&3 25, xlnt cond. :All extras. $2950. 673-4871 50' DIESEL Trawler Alaskan I~~==~~=~-type, $65,000. HOBIE 14 $775. 646-7588 * 499-1&11 • 970 Autos, Imported ' . ' Try the new Honda Civic"' for just fifteen niinutes. If you're not completely satis· fied ~tiJrn tbe unused portion to us, and you'll only be out fifteen minutes. There i9 one catch to this offer. When you find out how this car·handles, how it feels around comers and holds t he roa d and steers, you are probably going to want to buy it. Especially when you find out how little it c~ • ·SQ when yotl come for your f~ trial offer, bring yourcheckbook. -1 ~. 30 MILES PER G'ALL llG SELE@tJ ft79MMEDIA1E ·DELIVEI - •• ,.:. , .. " :;. CHOOSE· FROM 35 . .. . . . ·GRANDV·ILLES--CATALINAS BO,NNEVILLES 2 DOORS & 4 DOORS IMMEDIATE DELIVERY •• · EXECUTIVE CARS · & DEMONSTRATORS N·OW ON:· SALE! BU·Y OR LEASE YOUR USED CAR TODAY! "We try harder" • Finest Selection •Highest Trade ·Allowances '67 VW BUG f ully fo1ctory eq11ipped, imm1eu- lo1te! f VEJ<tl6) $995 '71 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 DOOR HARDTOP -Fully equipp•d, factory o1ir condi- tioning. 142SDEAI 51995 '69 PONTIAC CATALINA f ·PASS. WAGON Ro1dio, he•ter, •uto,..,•tic tr•n1mi1· 1ion, pow•r 1te1rin9, o1ir condition• ing, power br1ke1. l6lef?DEl1 51844 '72 DODGE DART SWINGER 6 Cyl. 2-door, 11nd1r I 1,000 milt,1, full fo1c:torv •equipt'll1nt, radio, •nd · lieater. t lt7FfHJ 52195 • 1 Year-12,000 Miles .. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~. ~~~~~ ~~~~~~ '72 FORD -USED CAR WARRANTY '67 PONTIAC '66 CAPRICE '71 CHEVY 1/t TON P.U. ' <: GRAND PRIX COUPE 'flfiA ....... .. .. d•-ttc ... ,.,., 1 Yfff ., 11,IOO ..U... wWU... KClrl flnt. . . . Autom•tic tr•nuni1sion, power 1teerin9, power brek•s, power . wlndow1, rildio, h1•t1r. {TXFl22l <4 1pnd, r•dlo,, • ·re1/ ec:o110111y t· cer. 119SDLT I · Rildlo, h1ilf1r, •utomttlc triln1mh· ilon, 1ir conditioni ng, power 1t11'r· "lo ln9, power brake1, clock, vinyl tap, V-1 l full f1c.torv equipment,, •\d DAVI aoss PONTIAC WILL WAIUNTY COMPLm DllVI TlAfN h1cht41 ..... 1 .. , "--halo11 & re• Hd ~: ~ · iliJ 1. }'.--~ . lil I _,,, .. . . 1 ... 'I= f " I ' GMC ' l40 HP Corvalr Sandrall FOREIGN ' 'MO'io~I • ·w1....i •notation ttr.s & CARS :• .... '23' ., 26• '. : : ; \ .lrlr. Dave alt 5, 548-3697. WE ARE IN •IM¥E!>!ATE OELl'IE'JlY Tltilcks 962 ' , Qraoae C..'s I , . DESPERATE NEED • ...., Exclusive r>ealer . OF GOOD1 CLEAN }Blll•ller<'(ilontlac ·. 171 .:SPORTS CUSTOM FOREIGN CARS . ·~~· GMO REC. CEN r ER 1 11\"i.,Super sharp. I spd. TOP DOLLAR-PAID · E. !st s!., Santa Ana rad & heat. New IZ x 16.5 FOR OR NOTI :, , 558-1000 __ ' 'tires l)1us orig tires & rilns1 Call or come in to see UL 'n.CLEARAN<;E * 892-1832 * ' ·PACE ARROW NEWPORT IMPORTS 5895 • 120 W. WARNER SANTA ANA 557-2132 ALFA ROMEO ALFA ROMEO SAAB Buy or Leese Sales • Service • Leasing • Ren tats . R;1\1rh Jh11p1111~; f <" ' . f« "'' ... , ' I ' • l • I'• -. . . .. -· ALFA ROMEO • SAAB in NEWPORT Wo Buy Uiod BMW's Top_ Dollar Pa.id CREVIER BMW Sales • Service • Lee.sing WI! W. let St., Santa·Ana 1$3171 . CAPRI . '"~ NOW OWN THE FABULOUS 1973 . CAPRI Chrome n1il1. l lOJl~L) • 11.49EKSl' $ 79 5 152905·· ' .. ..~"" -<I •• -, __ . • . ,... • I HARB R BLVD. ••• .... ·Y. . ..~ ....... "1;1 . '"'l:l'l·~ii SOUTtl Of 'T*iE"~N .DtEc;Q _Fft.l!WAY•. All .this & Economy Too!, ·s'O'B'.A'.R'U· FRONT WHEEL DRIVE . QUADRIZONTAL ENGINE ' ( .... -· ' . OWNERS ~~ORT UP . TO 35. ttfl~ PER . GAu;oN,, . 71 $71 :, • I "" " 11 6',' •o • ' i "" '• l ' •• "•'· • D M >'~~"'~"; <~ ,$'~' ~"1'• I, ·<~I·, n. • o .·.j·· , ......... ',"(.·,·-....,._ ,;,_ EXTRA SPECIAL TRADE·INS 1 ' ' ' . . ' ' ( j I • ASTON MARTIN Sport coupe deoor, body side mouldings, ~lining front seats, contour rear seats, 4 speed ~nsmissjon, power fro!Jt diSc brakes. style steel wheels, bucket seats, radiaJ ply tires. m>cc. eng. 1(GAECNB4280ll. '68 OLDS CUTLASS 2 Door hardtop, 4 speed transmis- sion. air conditioning, power steer- ing. (VOY703) -sm· ' ' ' -'73 AUSTIN MARINA1GT ' s259·9 ' J\usi.ln's·newes t mooef!~4· s}eed. ' . ~ {dio, ~t~, and onl}'. 6,100 miles . , , ~ -'.,I,, OVERSTOCKED! IMMEDIATE DELIVERY GUSTAFSON Lincoln-Mercury 16800 Beadl at Warner HtU!tington Stach • 1~2-1144 * (113) m.5544 ''lffroo of tloe Viking" ·' '·DATsUN '69 TOYOTA C~O,IQ 4 door. 4 speed, radio, heater. (YRL142) '71 SUllA,RU , . 4~speed, JadtO: hcater.')ow mJ\es,tand. \lef1 economJcal. (472DSN ) '67, TOYOTA ·" . , Wagon. 4 speed transmission, radio, beater. (VTW9221 ' ' s799 '69 MUSTANG . ' ·51599 V-8, automatiC transm~on, power • r steering, radio, heater,1 and white • sidewall tires. (:xnt746) . .. '61 O(DS'DRTA 81 5699 H~t ''C 'Upe, V-8 automatic trapsmls·; . 1 ( siot;lo 'A~/FM slereo radio, heater, fac· • tOr"J air' cOnclitionlng,. power steering. Md . ... t. white: aidewall tires .. (,WJi'Z104) ' '399 j l u ..... , .. ~ '' .. ~ 'S • • ) ,._• t -:' • * ~ • , t. ~ I" ( ' 1 I j f" .,.. • ·' Wfdntsday, August 29, 191.> •• > Wtdn,sday, August 291 1C17) PILOT·AOVERnSER IJ I§] I ~I ;;;;;;;;--;;--.. ;;;;;-;;;l~;:/~I ;;;-;;;"';;;'* ;;l§J~ I .iii! ..... _,,, __ .... .:i'il~_.· ;I 970 MAZDA Autot, lmportod 910 TOYOTA i1 § I .. , .. ~s. l ~ I ---'·~•,.•,,.•s•. iii, miiipoiiiiiirtiii ... .:•m• Autos, 1--..oc1 970 Autos lmDOttod 970 JAGUAR Autos lmportod 970 Autos, lmportod ]§] .__[ _ ..... _ ... _ .. __,]~ I' _ ...... ---Autot tor U. l-B-O_B_-LONG-P-RE-1 MAZDA WE BUY ; * M•;!• J~:;~uy * MAZDA ·~~-~r ~~ = USED J,:, ....,..;.:..~·~·...-;..:.:.;.·:.._~~ DATSUN 1 ---·~~'-~~---~~~--~--....;..;'c.-.:.......;.;..~""-" DA:rsUN JAGUAR NEW _ ..... MAZDA 1973 DATSUNS , ALL MODELS 71 Jaguar V· 12 MAZDA WE'RE MOVING XJ-12 BOB LONGPRE BIG SA VIN CS ON .. '73tlell\OI - 510'• Pickups l 610'1 · --fN--5-TOCK -• -E Jypt Coupe BARWICK IMPORTS 8C.,,R.(~~VJ.toaded, local E Tyl>' Cp,._ + Conv. MAZDA 36 MONTHS OPEN LEASE -SERVICE FIRST-lease • 30 mo. to I"• $91.T! ru-· -de.I EXet.u'SJV'f} mo. lf interested, phone • 33315 Camino Caplalrallo $6666 XJ-6 -SERVICE FIRST- EXCLUSIVF; C:u. :ii~·~~ MAZDAL£A$[ 5J&.l6U or 548-llll, l-4PM. TOYOTAS Ii H I B h MERCEDES IENZ ; San JUM Ql.plmano 493-3375 or 831-1375 FIAT 888 Dove '67 FIAT Sta. \Ygn. Fae air, Great Selection Ready For Immediate Delivery M unA. ZeDaAc °::.0i.:~· so usED ALL 1t'1iMOo1Ls 11 2~:!'--·,~'!'..:. b1 St. •t the s. A. FrNy. MERCEDES IN STOCK :I oXl.I•.... • .. ,. ~ E. lst St., S.A. 558-7871 2001 E. bt Strect_ '73 MAZDA. RX-2, 2 dr, auto ON DISPLAY MAZDA LEASE ~111 ,11 !Jiii " llli11l11 . Santa Ana 558-7871 173.11 Beach Bl. 842-66)1 trans, air cond, R&H, Angel Sharp New Car Like to trade? Our ·Trader '• 5 lines, 5 days for $5. Call Blue, 2500 ml. Ori&: owner, Trad~inl '•; ' I NcY.'port &·h R/1-l, good rondition. $69'S. 8J.3..1300 Open Sund11v Call ncn l.851. Any day ls the BEST UAY to ~ JU<r •n.in an ad! Don't delay •• ~llt1n111"; lll111t11~. 10\0lll~ ..U i• ~ ~"'· . .. . Paradise column ~ for you! today ••. 642.$18 S3600. or best oUer. 494-4892 Coming In Eva Do TRIUMPH ;1 980 Autos, Now 980 Autos, Now 980 Autos, Now 980 Alie About Our ~lqJ. 41 Sell Idle itenu· ~ 1 1.,o; :1f!<'r1 .\d'! ... 642·5678 call today 642-5678. Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, N- . ·-. -AT . CONNELL CHEVROLET ALL REMAINING 1973'S NOW CLEARANCE PRICED! OUR BUSINESS HAS BEEN SO GREAT THAT WE'VE BEEN GIVEN EXTRA SHIPMENTS FOR CLEARANCE! Largest Selection of MONTE CARLOS TO CHOOSE FROM CHOICE OF COLORS--QPTION~MODELS ALL 1973 MODELS NOTE: WE ARE NOW TAKiNG ORDERS ON 1974'S. ORDER NOW FOR EARLIEST DELIVERY SALE PRICED -ECONOMY SCHOOL CARS FOR, STU.DENTS: -BARGAIN$ '73 VEGA WAGON ECONOMY '73 CHEV. II NOVA A11tom•lic trer11111i11io111, r•dio, 212] mil11, like bril'ld n•w; f•c· tory W•rr•nty, (#1914 1 Vir1yl top, •ir conditlonin9, 11ow1r 1t11rir19, 111tom1tic tr1n1mh1i•n, 1750 mll11. lrowr1 c•r with b1i9• Interior, Skow room fr•1hl 1945· GV61 $2996 SALE PRICED $ALE PRICED -WILL TRADE '72 MONTE CARLO CPE. v.s, 16,0oo M;Jes 1802 FSA! , '72 MONTE CARLO CPE. V.8, Air Conditioning 21,000 Miles 1•53191 '72 MONTE CARLO CPE. v.a, Air Conditioning 27,000 M;Jes I 104EJB l '71 MONTE CARLO CPE. V.8, Air Conditioning 40,000 Mil es l631CQSI $ALE PRICED -WILL TRADE '73 VEGA HATCHBACK Automatic Transmission Rad io. 9795 Miles I 183GXPI '72 VEGA HATCHBACK GT Automll!tic Transmission Air Cond itioning, ·Radio 10,715 Miles IOl6EY21 '72 VEGA HATCHBACK Automatic Transm ission Radio, 27,000 Miles ICFR941 I '72 VEGA HATCHBACK Automatic Transmission 23 ,000 Miles l802E8M I '71 CAMARO CPE. $ALE PRICED -WILL TRADE '72 FORD MAVERICK v.1 R•lly Sport, •11tom1tic tr•n1ml11ion, p ower 1t•1rin9, •ir eondilionin9, radio. Tr1m•ndou1 Buy! 17JICJGl $2599 '71 CAMARO '71 CHEVY II V-1, •ufom•fic tr•n11n i11ion, pow•r 1f••ri1119, •ir COl'I• ditioni n9, •nd onl y 11,000 mil••· {529ETEI $2599 '70 SCOUT WAGON H•rdtop W•9on. 4 wli••I driv11, lock li11b1, r•ilio , 1••t1 4, l l ,000 c•r•fr•• mil•1, (679ABNJ $2699 '73 CHEV. BLAZER V-8. 4 wlt•el dr;.,.,, •utom•fie tr•n1mi11ion, •uw. •••t, 9100 mil11. l ik• N•w! !J45HKVJ WILL TRADE 6-CYL. 4 •P••d, power 1i••rin9, 20,15'4 mil•1. A student c•r! (OllEHH J '69 CAMARO 6·CYL AMlom•tic lr•r11mi11ion, power 1+••rir19, •ir con ditionir19. IYVN l02) MAKE YOUR 0Ff£R ON A NICE TRUCll, YOU MIGHT IE AN OWND - '71 GMC 3J.. Ton P.u. '71 Chev 3/.t Ton P.U. V-1, A11lom1lic tr•r11mh 1ion, V-1, Aufom•tlc Tr•n1ml11!on, ll ,OOO ·Mi/11 17,000 Mil•t 111171JI f25 '41 6HI '71 Ford 3J.. Ton P.U. '71Dodge 1/2 Ton PU VI, Automatic Tr1n1mi11ion, Autom•+ic Tranuni11ion, 34,000 Mil., Air Conditioning, 11 ,000 Mll11. 11 17ZOK J !601DLR I THIS OFFIR OPEN TO WHOLESALE IUYERS TOOi 15 OTHERS TO LOOK AT WITH SAME DEAL NOYA CPE. V-1, Stick, R•dio, 40,000 Mil•• (Jt 2CTQ J '73 CAMARO CPE. Green c•r with bl1ck lr1+.rJor. V-1, •utom1 tlc tr•n1mi11 ion, pow•r 1t••rln9, pow•r br•k•1, 1ir conditlor1in9. SHARP! IUUJ717) '69 CHEVY II $3799 NOYA CPE. 6-Cvl. Stick 56,000 Mll1• IZQF241 l '68 STINGRAY CPE. $2999 EVER IUY AT YOUR PRICE? MAKE OFFER IRING YOUR TRADE AND MAKE YOUR OWN DIAL, WI MIGHT ACCIPT IT. '70 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 4-Door, Air Conditronln91 lo•cledt ll,000 mll11, (151AEEl '71 BUICK CENTURION 4°Door. Air Col'Kl itionil!f, lo1d•dl 14,000 Mll11. 1542CXTI '71 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE WAGON Air Conditior1ina, 42 000 Mil11. l772CTKI '72 CHEVY IMPALA 4-Door H.T. Air Conclltlonlr19, Nie• Cir! IJ06EIEI '69 BUICK GS 400 COUPE l uck•+ Se•h, Air Col'ldltlonln9, 52,000 Mil•t, IYCH226 ) ''QUALITY IS THE REASON WHY CONNELL IS THE PLACE TO BUY" 2121 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA ' 546•1200 ~~=:R~~~NT 546•1203 Used Mercedes LNH °t'ra>c~' =~ .. enr,ero, ~ Plans Mab otter. EYft. se-nm: House of lmpo111 VOLKSWAGEN l 6862 Man ch.ester, Buena Part ' ... n the Santa Ana l"rw)' '68 VW ~-Radk>, lftl' .... 523-1250 ......... aood t!ret, ~ JIM SLEMONS = tow mu,.... ~ IMPORTS * '6S vw. $500. Good mec11: MERCEDES IENZ cond. • '66 vw Buo. ~ AUTHORIZED dial camper. Nu ~ SALES Si SERVICE clean. $960 firm. 986-USl. •' J. SI mons '69 v.w. Comper Pop .,,, rm e low mllea, Excellent coi' Imports dit1on. 494-Q14 ·: 1301 Quail '11> VW Bui. xlnt cond, ~ Newport Beach 1 da.y wk)y owner bu ~ 833-9300 car, $ll9S. 6'J3..62i4I. ·~ EJ\'TER FROM MacARTmJR '65 VW Bug, 135hp, 191»de1 '66 MERCEDES D I e 1 e I , Dual carbl, map. Mult Stick, ~bit eng, $2500. or of· .:mv!ce~~-. . .. fer. Pri. Ply. n4-493-62'76. ~. ~-..... ,, = '63 MERCEDES 300 SE Sun ell&', new brlca, clean. 1 Root. Fabulous condition. 831~ ' $1200. * 6'5--0385 'tl8 VW, auto, lo ml, ..W valve job, reblt trans, excel1 cond. $9911. M>-'15Gi _J, •n SUPER Beet!<, AM/FM. steel whJte walla. $l8Ct S<s."543 • ' • 1964 MB ,190 S e dan , automatic, immaculate. $1400 .• 548-9603 "'G 'G:l VW CU!t. camper, ""' 'm MGC. 6 cyt, x1llt eng. wn'l.cm mi. Muat lie cond. S1750. or d:fer. -must sell S'f;>O, 64&-1111 : . Call 580> 1131 --=-=='---l1n VW Bua, xm miles OD PORSCHE : ~"" " clutch. ~ '73 PORSCHE 914, new aold '68 ~· Baclr. llllat ..U. S9IO metalic appr groa.P , or otter. Good mechl.bkaJ AM/FM l'tereo, S.SO,m> cobdtUon. 64f..alJ.2 : r;:· =-'' clean. Alt VOLVO 'al ROADSTER w / 1 P• •. ___ C_OM_E_l_N--• 1 equlpt. nu 150 H/P. xlnt., ~-· mak. otlr, TODAY POR.OCHE '72 91.lT, Xlnt conditloo. ~spd. AM/FM stereo. ltfaintalned compan)' car. $6850. 714: 983-3649 '60 PORSCH E. Good mechanical co n d i tio n . Xlru. $1B50. 979-9144 RENAULT RENAULT R·l2 4 DOOR'S Automatic TraM:mltlion SALE $2499.00 DICK MILLER MOTORS TEST DRIVI luxury with economy .1 '73 Fuel Injected VOLVOS ~f41vit 1966 Harbor, C.M. MS-111111 Autos, u-Hi IUICK ., Ul W. Warner, S.A. '68 BUICK Skylark. 0ae 557.2132 owner. 24,000 mi. Uke ~ IRENAULT+l ,:~:~~:~1 TOYOTA tnt . Ru;~~~ $2021.95 Is the Delivered Price for a '73 TOYOTA COROllA at nuatfJUi& -TOYOTA 1971 BUICK RMera, Ulf ,reen met., bela:e int. to.l- ed. Xl.!lt thz'u.out $3500 6r ..... 642-2!M alt 7pm BLUE '67 Buldt. 29,500 ti& VS. Air. Radk>. Needs D1fW tire!. $85Ch$!KX). 548-0297 • j CADILtAC .: '69 CAO!lLAC Eldcndo, fully loaded, only 44000 nU. nu tftl, sharp. Priv. p&rt;i{ $3000. 642-2977. I '68 SEO DeVUte, wht wl!ik Landau top. 36,!XX) ml & sm>. ~1524. •; '64 CAO. Cpe de Ville. AJ xtras, newly painted, 1of1 cond. 1300. M>lSll · / 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 ·-alV --Mis bl . Order Your Color Today! •.> • z: ~ t • w/..mool, 4000 ml. LoodO<l You'll find, It 1n Ouatlled w/xtru. 613--5569. -· l~; Auro1, lmponecr 970 Auto1, lmponed !!f DOT DATSUN Hr YOUI -DA'l'IUll Ml CAii W1YH D .. OllmATIOll I'" "SERVICE" W\Meses ' ~ ! ! I ! I ! I I ,, l ' • l <· ' . PILOT·AOVERTISER Wtdnesday, August 29, 1973 Wednrsday, August zq, 1973 DAILY ~!LOT 55 ,, 19134 ,, SAVE HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS • • • EVERY CAR IN STOCK, NEW & DEMONSTRATORS. • Clyde John$0n . . President <;LOSE-OUT •ALL 1973's e FANTASTIC DISCOUNTS e TREMENDOUS SELECTION TAKE YOUR CHOICE FROM. • • 40 Lincoln Continentals & Maris 30 Mercurys & Montegos 35 Capris' & Panteras • l!om• Of The New Car , • • "Golliea 2'011~ ... ohnson & son Home Of The New Car , • • "Goldea 2'owcW' l 1\.('()I ~I 2626 HARBOR BLVD. OF CARS, COSTA MESA e 541).5630 ----·-----Autwfll'Slllil 9oO Autos, Used 990 Autos, UMd 990 Autos, Used FORD FORD MUSTANG OLDSMOBILE PONTIAC ' EL DORADOS '68goodCAMAndR1~:..oJ27· Clean, 1'4 STINGRAY 1966 CORVETI'E Convertible Good Transportation ·~~:~~er coupeSt~uto 1968 MUSI'ANG, V-8, auto, '65 OLDS 88, must sell $300 '70 GTO 400, P/S, P/B, co 573-!158 Immaculate. original paint -& Hardtop. 427, 4 speed. '60 FORD 4 dr vs auto . " ng, power steering & bnc.s. or best otter. a/c, ralley wheels, vinyl 14 TO CHOOSE hrterior, AMITM 4 spd, Ex· AM/FM radio. New tires. great 2nd car, $250. 'or .,.,.1U radio, heater 250 Cu In Air/cond. Yellow w/blk In-96()..1741 top. Xlnt coDd in & out. PrS ·coUPESCONVERTIBLES CHEVROLET trem.iy low miles, garage Real Clean! $1900. 546-1819 lrarle for lurlnture or , ECONOMY 6 cyl engine, tenor. Run• like new. $00), ply moo - • • kept, 1 owner. SHARP '69 Cotwtte. BJk, -427 * 543·3691 * ~~iles. Pri. p ty' ~ btwn 5 & 7 pm on· PINTO 1 '68~-;~="'a"· lRD=.~A~uto:-.-,Alr"",1 ' -· DE VILLES ·•• ~EVY Im-•• 4 dr, 4 •peodcd, loaded, $3000 '60 FORD $200 ·n FORD LTD 9 ~·s W•~n , * * '72 PINTO R bo l 4 rblt eng. Xlnt con d, · CHOO E vu ......-. ,..... Firm 642-4274 Xlnt cond. 400 "ena. ~ 69 MUSTANG, 351, p/1, una u . $1400/belt otter. 833-8408 31 TQ S hl"dtp. ReaJ nice -hurry! · ' 4 dr, VS, auto. Runs good. ·~ p/b auto ~-· ale good speed, mags, A i\1 / F l\l eves ~ COUPES $500. Good deal. 714 : COUGAR Price firm. mileage. ~-below book. ~e ;;d ... 'oond' must stereo, air. $2200. 673-8730, "n"-"PO::.· NTIA=~c=eo--UJ--1 SEDANS ~ * 543-3&91 * See to app1"'Uate! 846-U21 l II .,·~ • WleV e, ex· VERTIBLES am to s pm wkdays: only. te , ........ :>. or best ofr. 1911 PINTO. air. auto, 2000 · tra clean, PIS. P/B, .AJC. ._, ~~llent colon '72 EL CAMINO, b I u I! 3lOO W. Coa..tt H,vy,, NB. LEAVING country _ f.'fust '68 RANCHER.a. muc. fac-,63 FORD Fak'on xI 540-4481 bet 7:ll am-5pm cc, beW steel tires, mint. $2100 842--0371 .... i~of lnterion w/llberglau ton!leau, air, '42-9405 selt? lmmac •. 70 Cougar tcry air, radio, fiberg!Ull nt cond., wkdays. $1450. 6'5--8173. 1 ~--· ------ Cloth A leather) P/S, P/B, auto, 10,000 ml.. XR1 convt. air. loaded, 01· cargo cover. Sbarp looking. $l\o ~·~bat!, mech per! ·69MUSTANG Convertible r~·YMOUTH T ·BIRD -aJr coadldontna: $3275. or otttr. 675-8831 '69 CHEVROLET fmpala . fer. 83&a12'l $ll95. 833-0070, ~m 53&-0568 302 V-8, auto., p/!!., pfb. _.....;..; .. ::.:.;..;.::..;;.;..:~- power. a.otce o!: ·n Ell CAMINO. 4 spd, Cuotom 350. power steering, "ro COUG. Conv. Lo ml. 1961 FORD FALCON • Runa MERCURY AM/FM "'""°· 36•000 mi., '1.! DUSTER 6 1 to T-BIRD '89 Landau O>upe, ~~AM/FM ndlo =· fm, tape deck, just factory alr, tinted gls1111 l!lue/wht, P/S, P/B, must Good ·Needs Brakes tor On· I------'--'---$1400 ~l p/1, & ptb, v1%i ~t'. Full TJl)'Wel'. Air. 4 39 tWbte control • tee to a PP rec' complete, a11to1tlatic trans sell. $1700/offt>r 645-7569 ly $100. MIKE 839-1427 '63 MERCURY Sedan OLDSMOBILE Arn-fni radio, fact. air, 5,500 ThunderJet. 1 owner. $1695. l"Unk opener .6: more 645-6398· in console, strato Buc.ket '87 COUGAR XR7 loaded lo 'TI FORD Galaxle 2 dr hdtp, Solid Transportation Car 1_________ ml. $3,450. Pvt pty. 831-2538. 675--8811, 644-4181 1n lnimaeulate uondttlon '72 VEGA hltchhflck. air seats, Vln)ol roof. ?Adlai life ml $1100 &ft 6 pj.1 · Extra Clean, $1395. 1 ___ ..:~=:.:148::::...__ Sa1ft 6 1971 SATEWTE custom. ·55 T·Bird, retit ena: •• Laratlt Mlectlon la cond, auto trans, white side saver llre1, radio, heater, ' *"" ~-* 494-1886 '73 COLONY ~~ w·-n OLDSMSorvtceO. • --~.. ...ft......... ortatntJ. 11 t °"*"89 ~ II drk l20llO aood oond1 lo ~·•• ~~· 11--• BILE ~N-top AIC P/o, ,_ • ..,,, ). 83M9!s_ n U-L'"'-~373 • imn. •phone ~;· Sett otter, DODGE '61 FORD Galaxy PJO or ~~ll•ex.~~·· •••291m• eage. GMC TRUCKS P/b. Lo ml. iiaoo. M Ply. cond. $1lli0. nau.a • · . beat o!r. Att S. .. _..,. u-. -' HONDA CARS 83.'>-2008. '66 T·BIRD sharp clean xlnt -0~ DEALER '63 CHEV. Nova. 6 cyl. 3 •pd._ * 1913 OIEVY BI•• e r, 8934ff7 MUSTA~'G UN..,..~-OLDS PONTIAC appeora115?1006 .-cn11 )mllAltBOR Bl.. Runa ,IOQd . .r(;reat . tramP. 4-whl. dr. 350 w/auto trans, '68 OIARGER RT im· $399 OR bet ffr '63 Ford n IW51\.~I I 55)-8 • COSTA·MESA ·' <IN'. 6'3-0172 o'r"" &M--«tl. air, Tt1.co1na whit. w/Oe.tes .maculate and loaded with Galaxle cO~vertible -i _.._ •. ._...,_ .... ._..._ , _____ .;.;_;..;;___ ~T-Blnl. 2 dr.•-~ I 0 • $Z9 tire& AMn."'M 1tereo roll extl'8.I $1600 must see ' 6 "' '69 l\lUST. Conv, ~/s, p/b, 2850 Harbor Blvd. '6S PONTIAC CTO, nu e••, -~"'""" · · '.. ' ' ' ' ' mnd 644-7® Costa Mesa 540-9&t0 ..... All rv>\l'tf ..,.,,Ip. Call ,.,.nn _r :&r sedan de 1168 CHEVY tmpa1& V·8, bar, rear tlre n\O\lht. 5000 ~or m..st46 · · radio, white w/b ck top, paint, Ures. 4 speed, ma.~~. ""'~ MVb._ told at a auto, PIS. PIS, air cond., ml. $5300. 673--0360 '67 MONl\00 SlatiOn Wgn, *'69 LTD Country Squire bl.ck lthr Int. $1400. ~ '61 01.00 sml 'St&. wan. New bst of e\lt'rythiQc $750. . Hu -lov!olll' --$1000. -'51 OIEV. ()onvort. PIS 283, all pwr, lac lllr, rib dlac waaon. 9 pan. air, xlnt •MUSTANG "ro, p/1, p/b, tlm. bottery, etc. Good -Steve VEfiA IO< II)' tll)e ....... 'fl MALIBU 2 J)r, bard top S IPd. -work. Make of. brltl ltlnt cond. $ 9 5 0, cond, moo. 494-8322 air, R&H, top condition. llllape. $300. ~-. 'Tl GRAND Pr I x, ex· --------! b!l1!I Utru • ll, auco rib.· all'. vlll)<I top. tor 646oru6 -· '70 FORD LTD, $1300 tm 540-1416 i;.; OLDS 98, &ood cond., new cepttooal. All poWl!r. MUlt c;aa 6*.112'1 for llfuot H)I.,-. "Ill IMPALA, p;, p/b, air Jll64 DODGE Station Wagon. Can 502.Q2.'14 11169 MAO! J Mustat\J" !SJ lire• $400. sell, Beot ofter. 541).5551 :;::;:;..:,.=---,== Like to trade? OUr Trldtr'• ~ C'Ult()l(n. coupe. S-'«l or Belt Ofler. Mon·F"rl A s:ood want ad 1s • (OOd m. ent10(!1 air, has all,' prlCf!d 8Z7..s500 or 963-1435 Fut l'l'SUl\11 &rt' )Ult a pbOnt I Stll \d .. tttru , ., ••• 60-571 Puadlte column ls for )!Ill Xlnt cond. $2150. S46-8S81 8-S, 834-3923 or 536-407'$ C\-c1. '-'v"'H"'tm"'•"'nt".-----to eeU. 551-3346 Need a ''Pftd"? P1a"-e an ad! call away 64)-5671. ·n VEGA Hatchback, custom upholsttry, bi a engine, perltol ""'4ltlOo. 847..;JSIO. I ·' .L I l I .. • ~ . • DAil Y PILOT . ' . ·. . .. ,. WrdnHday, AU<JUSl f<I. 1973 Wfdnffday, August 29, 1973 PILOT ·ADVERTISER ' • ' . PRE LABOR DAY ''Calif. 1 500'' SELL·A~THON! ! !: $ FRIDAY NOON 'TIL MONDAY NOON-OPEN 'TIL BRAND NEW '73 OMEGA l*l 17b201 OVER DEALER INVOICE BRAND NEW '73 TORONADO I •7l9l0bl $77 OVER DLR. INVOICE MIDNIGHT** BRAND NEW '73 OLDS 98 1•2915991 $. OVER DEALER ' INVOICE . ePIT STOPe '66 OLDS 88 '68 OLDS DELTA 88 '68 JAVELIN '""' .,,,.,.., '" ~o-$577 '"'" "'"''''" '" ,,. $577 """ --"""" $677 ditlonlng, (TGK20•1 dlHonln;. (WXL..0~) '73 OLDS Cutlass Supreme $ '70 FORD '69 FORD GALAXIE 500 '69 DODGE POLARA WAGON '68 OLDS CUTLASS '69 OLDS 98 COUPE '""' "'"''""'· ;,, ,,. $917 :.:~: . .:·:m:o::· ,,. $917 ~i .. ::::-" '" $1277 di!Jorii1111. !XXA001) CXXEJ2') TAKE YOUR CHOICE '70 OLDS '70 OLDS 98 '69 CAD. '70 MERCURY 98 COUPE LUX. SEDAN Coupe De Ville MAR9UOIS Fully tquipped, •it eondi. Fully equipped, eir eondi· Fully equipped, eit eondi. Fu lly equipped, eir eon . tionin9, vinyl fop. llbS· tionin9, vi nyl top. (72b· fionin9, vinyl top. fY ZS. ditionin g. (S4JEIG! HD El APM l 221id $ DN. 77 MO. $77 i1 fotal down pymt. $77.77 i1 tote[ monthly pymt. incl. I••, li cense, end ell e1rrying char9e1 on epproved eredif for )b month1. Deferred pymt. price i1 $287b.72 incl. I•• l lieen1e. ANNUAL PERC ENTAGE RATE 15.40 7.. Tofel ce1h pric1 i1 $2200. 455 VS engine, .. speed trans- mission. 1128 1771 '68 MERCURY '69 PONTIA_C ,73 PINTO COLONY WAGON IONNRILLI GMC TRUCK COUNTRY BRAND NEW '73 SPRINT Fully ~ulpped (WXG'/52) LOADED! (ZENlSl) $1177 ~ 277 '~~~~~~PO) HONDA CIVIC CENTER - '73 HONDA CIVIC l•l90HPDI • • . -. ( • • ~ , • " ; • ,. . $ 1*5019501 -~~OV~ER:_::DE:AL:ER::..::IN~VO=IC~E--~~----------.:;;;;;;;;;$=19;;;;;;7=7;;;;;;;;;;;;;:.~-~ --- WE A~PRE<;IATE YOUR BUSINESS · . ·! \ · 1 \ •• •• ,. • J / ' ~'is that.-~~ual opportunify to ,purchase a new Cadillac. We rve ·66 ~~w: I C:a~ll!acs to sell hefo ~e Sep~emher 10. ill ". . . • • or Beat The Pri~e Inerease· .. ' 1973 COUPE DE VILLE Full)'~ with vinyl roof, climate control air conditioning, full power 6 way, aea.t, AM/FM stereo mulUplex radto, tilt&: telescopic \vhecl, tinted glass, ~be control, ~oor KJU_i;ds, and a h<llt of m&ny o~her factory cpnvenience exuu. CSU>ck 71020) • • · f ' ~AN DE VILLE . . . ' .. · ·, 'f""t~ r, / :ru.t~ IJO'"r equipped "ith autOmaiic cli~te Control air conditfon!na, full · ~.Ji._Qy -~~ t1it: I: tdescioPJle, wheel. AMlFM radio \\'ith powe'r antenna, ~ii¥ glass, ~te sldew&ll' tireS. (Serial 6049RJQ297463) ~ J ~ • • .. . , 56677 FULL PRICE 1973y,~ .. -~ EL/OORA® ,,, cABRIOLET . Full power including 6 way aea~ AM/FM "'""°multiplex radio with pow~ '·S,84.7 7 antenna, tilt & telescopic steering wheel, Vogue premium tires, ~tc. Very low R.J LL' PRt(Ef .. ~. miles. (363FPW) · • ,. \ ; ; ._ ~ • • \, ·' • • • t • J·} • _.I • .. ORDER NO.W FOR EARLY . . .. . . DELIVBRY ON YOUR -':74 LEASE . - Wtdntsd~, A119ust 29, 1973 DAILY PILOT l!f1 Larg~ ·:Selecti~~·. Of. ~f4ilfaos :J•, Or•Qfe ~-ntJ. .. " • BROUGHAMS • .COUPES • CPE. DE VIWS ~ • CONVEltTl.11,.ES • I~· DORADOS • SED. DE VIUES -----,----ova -17s QUAUrt~ --· AUTOMOl!llLES TO CHOOSE FROM ·Wide Selection ·ot Mciclels & Cfolors,. For lnimecllate Delivery; ;67 CQUPE DE VILLE . Fult pow•;, l1•fh1r.'lnt1rlor,, .,;11yl tof.,1 tilt wltHI., AM/FM> ,..ii., fMf~ry •rt co!Mli!lcilllllJ: IU0Sl4/) ,..., " _, '' ~·· • '69 FORD LTD ~ •' . 4 cloor h•rdtop, •utom•tic, f•ctory •ir conclitionln9 1 power 1teerin91 pow•r br•kes, white · sld, w•ll tlre1,1yin.,+ top & interior. IYC'962) · '68· SEDAN DE VIU.E Aclrl•tic turqu_oi1e w-ith w-hit• ¥inyl top, h1rquoh• t•p•1try & l••th•r, full power, f1ctory •Ir conclitionln 9, tilt •••t, .w-ht1•l1. AM/FM 1t•r•o, pow•r locln , eJ1c•ption•I conditio,., IWBK· 065) • '69 .COVGAR 51777 ELIMINATOR. Only 44,000 mlte1. V-1, •uto. tr•n1., power steering, power 'brake1, radio, he1t•r, n•w whit. &+cl•w•IJ tir .. 1, vinyl Interior. Show1 ••c•ll•nt c•re. (fillASA) · ' . . '69 CHEVELLE . •MALI BU. Yi11'/11 top, T•P••try Jnterior, f•ctory •ir coltditio,.in9, v.1, eutom•tic, power 1teer· ing & brek11,-r~io~ 'Yi1/S/W1 IXIH2721 ' .. -'70 OLDS DELTA 88 Cusiom -4 door hercltojl, fectory. eJr cohdltfO;"l"f• pow.r 1teetln9, power br1ke1, ¥inyl top & Interior, white side w•ll tires, r•dlo, heifer. ll060DA.) " • 1 5l77.7 . .. I 51999 :~~bl~?..~:~ ,;R~ .. !~~~~"'"• f,11 pow,., hoto;; ''' """ 51999 ditioning, AM /FM stereo raclio. tilt 1t1•rin9 wheel. IXEUl74 ) ~ '" '70 BUICK WIIDCAT CUSTOM . ll,510 mile1, olympic. bro,.1• wi#i white ¥i nyl top end int1rior, f•cto~ •ir, auto· rnatic, power 1t11ring, power disc. br1ke1, AM/FM, W/S/W tit•• etc. 1761HOM I '72 PLYMOUTH · Sport SUBURBAN 9-p11s. w•ton witfi •utom atic tr•,.tini11ion, f•c.tory eir conclitioNng, pow· ',,; steering, power br1k11, AM/FM r•dio, cruh• control, /ulj9•9e r•ck, '"d v9r,i fOw mile1. •I079HNV) I ' ~-:ZO;SBD;AN,.DE ¥ILLE "· .. · _,, Vinyl tep,' li •ther int•riOr, fulf~pow•r, fl'ctiny 1ir ':cowclith~~in9, tilt & t•l11clip1 ~f9'ring, power cloor lock1, a beautiful 11/tomobile. (21 4A68l :~~ ,,~?~,~~,..~,~ .,Y,~~~~ ... 1"''~ '1' """"'"'"•·-"" s 3.3 :' '' ' steering wheel, and power door lock1. I ]IOAGCI • • .... J_t t '69 CONT. MARK III t • \. • ·(j·3 .A'.·\·, .. '~,.~,"~". 9~ Rom•n Red with white vinyl top, white l11th1r Interior, full power, fectory •ir conditioning , • _, ~ clua l comfort •••fl, tilt 1teer/,.9 wheel, AM/FM tlereo, •tc. IXQW26fl · , .,, . fil• r ~;~:~,~~~:·!~~~?.~~:~.!1.~'~~;/;,'!:.~.~·~,~~~i~'.3.:1'5 5 control, etc. Totally equipped. ll2SCXDI .···., · · t~, '•' '73 CAPRICE CLASSIC · ..•. \·. s-3· . 999· -4-Doo~, Sed•n, _vinyl top with tapeatry Interior, f_~ll ew-er, !•c.tery ~r conditio111ine, ~u•I!:"'' • comfort •••ft.tilt 1••f, w~1el1, AM/FM stereo radio, power door lick1. (1126kM1 • -. ' CHRY.SLER . . -~ _-_-·s422~· :· NEW YORKER BROUGHAM 2 door h1'4tt;p. ·l~tt th~111 1,1 00 ;na,,. Fill .power equipment f· plus f1ctory air conclitio,.in9, vinyl top, 'vJliyl b11,ket l9,•f•, tilt tte~r/119 •heel, AM /FM 1t•reo • multiplex, power d09r lo,k1, 'cruJ1• · 'ortr'~I; t't~l!'t •Clui . f246FYWI ~ ~~1; .. • '70 EL,~ooRAOO ·, • w • • • ' . AJrietle T•rqlioke ,l•fCIU•r .finith' witll wtiite vinyl top •nd hlr41uoi1e interior, full power, fac. tori •ir corid.,' tflt &l-teletcopic steering, AM/FM 1t1r•o multiplex ra4io, power door lockt, etc. Low rnile1 end exceptionel condition. CZQW967 1 :JA~ WP.~F~ •" ""'" "''· tt. ... pow""""'''· "" b"'"'· w;,. s 4 3 3' dow1, tall 9•1•, tilt 1teerin9 wheel, AM/FM 1tereo multipleJI r•cllo I I track tape deck, power cloor locb, cruise co111trol, lu;9•9• r•ck.' l900HSTI '72 SEDAN DE VILLE . . Vinyl top with leaH11r interior, full Rower, factory air conditionfii9, AM/FM 1ter•o r1dio, tilt .1teeri119 wheel, end,.power door locks:, llltEOJI · ' -.... .) I • • :J8 DAIL V PILOT Wtdntsday, August 29, iq73 ' ' ' • ' ~ ' ' ' ' ' ·-' . : ·- • NEW '73 :;~PL YMOVTH ·: SPORT . ~UIURIAN :· ~TA~ION WAGON -; :, :~/qui pped the wev vou want it, : 1nel11din9 air conditioning. Ser. :: No. PP-46M lD]ll807. -• • .. " LATE MODEL NEW CAR TRADE-INS •.. TOPS IN 9UALITY ••• TOPS IN VALUE! '70 FORD GALAXY 500 •Dr. V-1, ilUtomsllC transmi•sion, radio. ne.ater. power sieving, po-r b<akes, WSW !lrn, 1lr, Ind vln'{f IOP. !'-"FON) '58 FORD COUPE see ro s~1 .... 11 V..S, aulOmatlc lran,mli.- .ion, rlldlu, llt•rer. air condlrlonln11. (IANS191 5495 CLOSE·OU Ser. No. 'VL29ClG2619ll $ • ... D\SCll\IRl 1973 PLYMOUTH DUSTER COUPE An exciting, beautifully equipped automobile. \\\~!~!!' suGGEST ACT\.Ut.ER'S OFI' tAAM0UfRETAIL PlllCE suGGESTE TOWN AND COUNTRY WAGON 500 l-Or. H.T. V-8, •urom1rlc 1r11nsml•· slori, radio, t>e•rer, wn!le side w11ll tires, af!d air condltlor.11111. BllC.ket s11111 end CDOIOle 111.ol {165HGC) $695 '69 BUICK Skylark 2·DI'. H,T .• V-1, automatic 1r11nsmllitlon, 11lr C(lfldllloning, rl<llo, llH!er. Pll""" 1leeth>g, powe-r Wakn, WSW IJr", Ind vln yl IOP. (YPSOOO) H.T, V-1, avtomatk: lr1nsrnl11lon, r.cllo, he&lft", po-r steerlog, iio-r brtkH, WSW llres. &Ir cont1Ul1111lng, Ind rally wheell. {31A8HL) '69 CHEVY Wagon V.f, automarlc tra115ml.,lon, radio, ~•I· er, powtt stttrlng, POWef' brakes, WSW !Ires, air cooditlonlng, 110 steering wl>eol, •rid roof rack. (70llAEX) C11$1om SUbt.lrb.lrl 2·Dr., V-1, IUlom.ll•C 1r1nsmisslon, ritdlo, ""'11tr, 1X1wer sttt•· Ing, pcwer brakes, WSW llrn, Ir.cl .tlr condlliol'llrig, (VRCSll) s595 '68 CHRYSLER New Yorke-r. Vinyl IOJ!, b1Kket s11t1, V·I, automa!lc transmission, rit!llo, ne~ter, llOW8f' ste.,.-lng, power br1k1!$, WSW !lr11, and air conciltlonlng, !XNUSJ2) s995 ' QI Oeh11• Lo• i ' . ment \nc.\udinq q111P . Conditioning. , .. • W~ntsday, A~ust 29, l q73 lllSl:IJUN OFF MAHUFACTUllEl'S SUGGESTEO RETAIL PR lC I! PILOT-AOVERTISER M .. NOTICE! !HEAVY DUTY SERVICE FACILITIES PITCHI BOTH VEHICLES SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE PRICE AND DISCOUNT VALID 'TIL 10 PM, MON., SEPT. 3 -~ TH E .GU~ '73 "GO-ANYWHERE" SCOUT AT AN UNBR IEVABLE LOW PRICE Plu' Ta~ And lic1n1• Hip s.fec.tlo111 of l1cltl11t New '73 SCOUTS RIGHT NOW AT ATLAS INRRNATIONAL Yowr R•cr••tion•I V•h ic11 H11clq11•rt1r1 s,,. No. lSl56CGD41111 • OPEN LABOR DAY 'TIL 10 P.M. ' . - DAILY PILOT EVERY NEW & USED CAR & TRUCK NOW AT MODEL YEAR-END SALE PRICES DURING. 1973 MODEL CLEANUP THIS-IS WHAT. Y;OUl\fE BEEN WAITING FOR! 1973 FORDS WILL NEVER BE LOWER. COME IN TODAY. . DEMO SALE ALL DEMO AND STAFF CARS MUST GO! SUPER SAVINGS ON ' T-Birds, LTDs, Torinos, Galaxie SOO's, Mustangs, Station Wagons Wlflll THEY I.AST! BRAND NEW 1973 THUNDERBIRD 2 DOOR HARDTOP lnc1...ie-. a1 ""e•!r11 co11 : Cruls .. O·Ma!lc Tr1n$tTll111oo-Pawer Fre<11 Ouc llr111t1s-Pawer StHrlno-Lell·l'>llnd lot'!mo1e Ce<1lral .-.1rrar-S1tel Belted R&dl11I WSW lire\-Fton! 6ump1r Gu11•ds-SP11r1 Tire Lock-Elec!rlc Cloc~-Wheel Cov&rs-AM Rad•o-M11ny Olhtr LU•U•Y Feaiurei.. Emerakl Flre14U/Gl1mor 1111lnt op11oo group. ~ (10 4V I CVllndlr Englne-LH1h..-Trlm-O!lrk Green Vinyl llOOl-C1i11Grnl11 EmlHlonl T1>llng-Fronl Cornl!fJng L11mP1-ll1m BIOw·O!llv•e E1rg Wheel-l'awcr 51!'111·6 W1y Driver Qnly-Oper1 Wlndaws-0.IUlll !lumper GroYo-Alr Con<11t~11et·Stlect1lre-Electrlc Rear Window OetrM1er-POwer Anl1tM1-AMIFM Sl1reo ll~d•a w1l .. 1>1-Automa1lc $1111 8aclt RalHse-Delu•e Seal 11nd Sl\Oulaer 61ll1-0ul5kl1 llH 11......o!e Cnlrl M1rfar-Tln1eo Gl1•1<ornplell-Cooveni......:1 LIOhl Gr0111>-Power Side Wlnaow .... Powtr Loe.It Group. LI ST PRICE $7813.76 SAVE $1500 DISCOUNT PRIC~ $6313.76 Ser. #lJ87A1 9 123 l ------~--~-. BRAND NEW' 73 CRUISAIRE BRAND NEW 73 FORD. LTD BRAND NEW 73 FORD LTD CountrY Squire WaC)Cin 1973 LTD 2 DR. HDTP 1973 GRAN TORINO 2 DR SPT. HDTP LaPca Model Van Conversion Country Squire WaCJOn WITH IUllU TOPI Crui11·o•metic tr1n1mi11iot1, power front di1c br1k11, C111tom •ciuipmtnt p1ck1g1, 1djo,11t1bl1 ptlllfUJtr 111t, power 1t11ri119, l ·w•y door91t1 w/power window, peddt.I i.n1trum111t p1n1l1 1mmet1r I oil pre11ur1 1p1r1 tire 1xfr1ctor, 1l1ctric cloc k, wfl1el covers, duel 91u911, crvilt ·t·mt tic l ·tp•ecl. oplion1 I r1tio r•1r f1cin9 •••r 1111 h , r•dl•I ply W/S/W tlr11, d1lu11• lu9· ••It, bo4y tide mo11ldh11~t, p1wer br1~e1, t1dio·pu1h g•9e , .. ck, delua1 c•r9 0 1r••• •it conditioner, AM/FM b11tton, •11tr• cooli ng r1di1tor, SS •mp 1ll•rn1tor, 70 1t1r10 r1diO, d•t11Ke 1e1t t nd 1hould1r b•ltt, t int•d •111p b1tt.ry, ft•11t I '''' h11vy d11ty 1hack1, powt r 91111, t lectric power J oor loc.k1, •le. tt•••il'HJ , h11¥y J uly front 1prln91, •le. LIST PllCI $7n5 LIST PllCI $6425.71 SAVE 51130 SAVE S1300 DISCOUNT PllCI $6145 DISCOUNT PllCE $5125.78 51 r. a EJ4C7TR•lllA Sir. * lT7652ll9•5 Crui1t ·O·m1 lic tr1"1mi11ion, power front di1c br1k•1, power sl•trin9, ].w1y d oorg1le w/pow•r window, du1I f 1"n9 re1r 101h, r1 di1I ply w/1/w tir11, con· v1ni1nc1 9roup. d1lu111 luggoge rick, •ir conditioner· 11l1ct1ire, A M/FM st1r10 r1dio. deh1~0 1101 ond 1houlder b1lh, iinted gl111·compl1t1 1l1chic power door locks, pow1r ~~I window1, etc. LIST PRICE $6385.86 SAVESl300 DISCOUNT PRICE $5085.86 S•r. ~JJ76Sl2611<4 DEMO . Ct11it1-o-m•tic frt n1mi1tion, power Iron! di1c br1k11, pow1r 1l••rln9, •lectric c:lock, ¥inyl roof, r•dit l ply w/1/w tir11, con¥1nienc• g roup, eir condition1r-1e- l-ct1lr1, AM/FM tllr•O r1dio, 11 u!Om elic 1e1t b1c~ r•l•111; 1 pptar•~c• protection 9ro11p, d1lu•1 111! ind 1houlCl1t b1lh, t l•c:hic pow1r door lock1, pow~r 1ide wlndow11 •ft. SALE PRICE $4195 S11r. #]J151631!2 0 1111 r1c.in9 mirror1, color·k1y1d c1rpt fl n9, pl1•~ ¥inyl 11et lrill'I , 11l 1ct01hift cr11 it•·O·m•Hc, pow1f 1te•r· ln9, .di1c br•k11, d1l11111 bull'lp•r 9ro.ip, 1ir co1uUtirl11J• er·1e\ect1irt, AM/FM 1t.r10 r1di•, tiJ1tM 9lt11 • a:..,.. plcl1, etc. SALE PRICE $3695 Se r. #J H JS S !S~OI j .. .• • NEW CAR SALES HAVE OVERSTOCKED OUR USED CAR DEPT.I SAVE NOW ON OUR 21/2 ACRES OF FINE TRADE INSI ;· ; '7l CAMARO H.T. Fu ll ,o,,,.er, f•ctory air co11dilioflin9, 1•d t ~ly 57,000 mile1. 1444GOPI HAll.D TO FINO USEDlll MAKE OFFER 71 CHEVY MALllU 2.Dr. H.T.'2284 1!;1dlo, h11t1r, 1utom1tlc tr1 111ml11io11, ptw•r 1teerin9, 1ir c:ond!tioning, 111d t Ood fl'lllt M S91 0AI '70 RONCO 4 r 4 W19•11 mod11 with 4 whetl dri~•. r1dio, l.11f1r, i nd good mit11. ( 31'4· AUI J HARD TO FINO U5ED l!I '71 T·llRD LANDAU Full fMWlt, 1lr c:o11d., Wl r· r111ty 1¥all1lil•. &oocl tnll11. 1741C~I '71 T·llRD LANDAU Ltd!NI, fo 1'lile1, m111y e•· tr11. lt140CHI •••• ONLY MAKE OFFER 53484. '7l PLM SORIN• 1'1111 9,000 mile1, r1ilio, h•et1r, t ufom•tic HARD TO tr1111mi11ion, power 1t1ef'l119, •lrr'co11d-s l!lo11in9, ¥inyl top, end low, lo~ "'lle1. FIND U ID" l927$NN! ~ '70 IUICIC &ICTRA H.T. 115. l lH, a.irt -4 PY''· tfl'f., wind1. l '2 784 1eeh, tilt wh11I, vjllyl top, AIR CONO. 17961EUJ / 'H CHR4il NIW YOlllH 4.DR. HARD TOP, '1.1 11 pow..,, •lr·con· clltioni119, good ,,,u,, C'f'CNll I) •914- 71 AMC JAYnlN 84 RI H, ewfo., power 1le1ring, •inyl roof, '23 All CONDITIO NI N$, lo mila1 ! 1136 CQTI '70 CHIYY WA•ON Kl n91wood, RIH, •11tom1tlt, paw1r 1t.1tl 119 roof r•ck, t lr conditionint • 1176CAXI 'H l'OllD XL HARDTOP leJle, he•ter, 111tom•tic, power 1t1er· 1119, •Illy/ ro•f, .iir co11d., good ·mile1. 1747EIAI '1984 FORD , SALE! EXAMPLE ·'7l FORD LTD H.T. PINTO·MAVERICK·MUSTANG·TORINO GALAXIE·LTD·WAGONS - MANY TO CHOOSE FROM '65 THRU '73 MODELS Squires, 2 D-& 4 D-·1' Hardtops; With & WlttlodrAlr Condition· Ing. 4-6·8 cyllndon. WARRANTY$ AVAILABLE. · EXAMPLE EXAMPLE '72 GRAN TORINO WAGON '72 CUSTOM 4 DOOR fu ll po..;er, f1ctory t ir c:onditionin9, AM/ FM, ... in.,.I roof, power door lac1u , 111d only 9,000 mile1. !171GIUI Rtdia, he1t1r, 1utom1lic tr1n1m i11 ion. power 1f•orin9, feo:.tory 1ir condilionil\9, roof r1~k . and 21,000 mif11. 1295EGfl lie. Ret. Aulometic, power 1l•1rin9, 9ood mile1. 2 lo choo1e from . {f]S40Z ) (ISO· 159 ) 53984 $2984 $1684 '68 IUICK SPEC. WAGON R1dio, h.1t1r, •vlom1tici, pow11 1ie1r- i119, 1ir, roof ri ck, toM tnllet . C 110· EXX I '69 PONT. SAFARI Wagow Jl•dio, h•1t1r, 1utometic tr1n1mi11ion, power 1te•rin9, roof r1c:•. 1ir condi. Honina, end a ood mi111. (69l ELUl '70 DODGE DART Rtdio, h1ater, 1uto-tr11111 pow1r 1t1fr. iniJ, 1ir-c:ond illonln9,~ 9oocl mil et. (4-41 C EK I 5 1184 '1684 '1584 --'65-MUSTANG H.T. ___ -~ '884 6·Cyl., 2-t one, r1di1, ht 1!1r, 1ufom1 - tic tr111uni1tion, 111d 9 ood mlt11. ( •116192) "73 PINTO WAliON l i9 •n9in1, 1utom1tlc tr1111mis1ion, r1· , dlo, h•1ter, rOof r1c•. i nd only 9,000 mil11. I009HWF> HARD TO FINO USEC lJ '70 MUSTANG H.T. 6 cyli11d1r. Economy 1p1ci1L Redio, h11t1r, g ~ettf mil11. 177J!FCl 'H l'ORD TORINO H.T. R1clio, ht1t1r, 1ulom1tic tr1n1111i1titn, power 1t•tth1gb1ir conditioni119, 111d 9ood mll••· IX 173 0) MAKE OFFER '1584 '984 · '67 IMPALA W°'°" Redio, h11i1r, 111to"1,1tic lren1mi11ion. power 1te1rin9, 1ir condit lonln9, •nd qood mil11. ITYT21 1 l '67 MUSTANIO HT R1d io, ft11l1r, 1ulo-tr1n1 pawer tltlr· in9, ¥i ny l roof, good mile1. IVHC992 ) '68 FORD LTD 4 DR. H.T. R&H, t 11 lom11ic, power 1l•erin9 , 1ir cond<~ionin9 9ood mile1. IWIC649) '71 TORINO G.T. HARDTOP R•dio;l,;;t;i., 6utarilttic, p ow•r 1teer· in9, eir cond ilionin9, good mil 11. ( ]06- DIMJ '66 CHEY. 'I• TON \I.a, eutom1tic, r1dio, h11ter, .iir can. ditioning, new p1int. tU211<46 1 '71 FORD 4 DOOR SEDAN 302 e n9i111, r1dio, h11t1r, 1utom1fic:, power 1te1rin~, 9ood mi/111. 1707DJ AI '70 SPORT FURY Plymouth H.T. R&H, t utometic, P.S., 1ir cond ., law ll'lil11. 1632 '984 5 1084 ·'·1084 MAKE OFFER '1484 '1784 COMPAC"fS..:..MANY TO CHOOSE FROM DA TS UNS-TOYOTAS-VW-VEGA5-PINTOS MAVERICK ' ' ' . . ALL OFFERS . CONSIDERED ' ' '71 VW WES.TPHALIA Camper HOD · TO Only 26,000 m1l11. Em 1cul1t1 through "" '"""' FIND USED v '71 INTERNATIONAL '>'• P.U. '2984 He1¥y duly c1nip1r 1q11ipm1nt, 4 1p11d, power 1t1erin9, i nd low mil•1. • • !S~81-4Pl ~ '64 FORD P.U. w /CAMPllt Shell, V-1, 1utom•tic tr1nsmit1io11, ••· dio, h•et ... , 111d 9ood.mil••· IU6tf61 '67 PONTIAC FIREllRD Hird top, r1dio, het fer, 1uto-tr1n1 .. pow•r ttflering, .,.;nyl roof. !UTi l 16 1 '69 CAMARO 55 H.T. R1dio, ho1htr, 1utom1tic tr1n1mi11ion, power 1leerin9 .. vinyl top, e nd 9ood mil•t. (SAOPQH l '66 OLDS f.85 H.T. R1dio, h1 1i1r, 1utom1tic tr1n1mi11io11, pow•r 1!11rinf, n•w 2-tont p1int, end low miles. ISST995 1 '71 PONT. LE MANS Redio, h"'1t1r, .iutomttic tr1111m is•ion, power lfeering, •nd low mil •t. f91l- OCI) '71 WAGON .'984 '1684 '884 '1784 4 1pl!l1d, R&H, chrom• +rim. 1887CXWJ "1i .COUPE R&H'J. 1utoon1tic: eir c:o nd .. low mile1. l779FW P) VEGAS ~ ~-....... ...,. ....... , ----. -· IAlllAlllRIWI - I ALll DI PT. HOURS1 I am--t.'"' Mon .• frL1 I ........ ,m l at.1 10 am-6 pm Sun. PA.RTI llRVICI HOURS: 7 1rn.t pm Mon.; 1 •"""' ,m tu" •• frl. PARTS 01", ONLY: I 1m·1 pm let. Solt Prlc•t lffHtl.,. ttlfll S1111., S.pt. 2, 197) ( 6 0 DAILY PILO T Wtdntsday, August 29, 1973 ~~~~~~~~~--'"---'--~'---- '73 FORD F2'50 % Ton CREW CAB EL' DORADO 9V2' CAB OVER '4 TON PICKUP Heavy duty eqpt., a uto. transmission, power s teer- ing, etc. F2SHCS2S9S1 CAMPH Sleeps six, gas/electric re- frig., carpet, etc. · DISC OUNT llOM SUGGISTlD lnAIL 'llCE IMME DIATE DELIVERY • •: Wod,,.sday, Au;µst 2!, 1!7) . ~~~D '73 FORD YAN CONVERSION ,. '· V-8, auto. ·trans., ~ steering, Power (disc) brakes, stove, sink, AC/DC refriger., toilet, etc. E34GHR68910 DISCOUNT fltOM SUIGlmD llTAIL HICE IMMED IATE DELIVER Y al&ND NIW '73 FORD COURIER llAND NIW '73 LTD. llAND N!W '73 LTD 4 DOOR HARDTOP ~~~No '73 GRAN TORINO WlTN & NEW CAMPER Shell OIDll YOUIS TODAY. ~ v ........ .,_.,...., ... _.. ...... ,......n.. ..... IMJ ............. ~ .... $! ... ••• r..tit, lie•!.,, ,_.. wt.I,_,.,., __ ....,...., ·~ ft~I illtwlw, •itltt ,_. ....,. ...... ,... DISCOUNT FIOM FACTOIT LIST IMMEDIA TE .DELIVERY V-8, auto. trans.,tactcryair condlttoolng, power steer- ing, power (disc) brakM, t adio, h!ater, tinted glass. wlleol ewers. Serial No. 3JMS205050 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY '71 CAMA80 SPORT HARDTOP d V-8, auto. 1rans... power steering, radio, heater, bucket seat!. (274CQO).' '66 El Camino v.a, stlcjt shift, radio, heater. License No. '429Jn _ '7.0 ECONO Wlnctow van, 6 cyt., auto trans.. rtdio, heater, I pass. Uceme No. t5121E :~?.H~2~~~uto.tr>nL,lacloryak $1 08 8 :~!ry~.9.n~~.Y:!~1J~~~dor:air $1388 conditioning, power steering, radio, heater, conditioning, power steering, radio, heater, vinyl roof. License No. (922AKS) luggage rack. tXNX-598 '68 V.W. Fastback . '4 speed, AM/FM radio, heater. Ucenw N9, (691CEA) '69 FORD VAN E JOO, llUfO. trans .• tv-tont paint, pass. seat. Llct nse No, 22233E '71 FORD Conv. V-8, auto. trans., factory air condittoning. power steering, radio, heater, whitewall tlr~. Licen~ No. (877ESO) '69 IMPERIAL V-8, auto. trans., power steering, power br•kes, power windows, power seats, AM/FM stereo. radio, he altr, whitewall tires, vinyl roof, tinted glass. Li~nse No. (XHS322) '71 Monte Carlo v.s, auto. trans., power steering, radio, heater, \vhi1ewall tires. Licen~ No. (S42DL T) '65 V.W. BUG 4 speed, radio, heater. License No. RGU189 '66 MUSTANG $1 799 1888 Auto. trans., radio, hHter. License No: (RRA187) . '69 CHRYSLER New Yorktr V-8, auto. trans., factory air conditioning, power steering,· power brakes, radio. heater, whitewall tires, tinted glass, l(YXW·A92 ) ~!'II • ' $1.088 1 :?.~N!~!~!~ air <~itioning, ~ 1 · 3 8 8 radio, heater. License No. 062BIM , '71 COLT . A speed, air conditioning, radio, heater, neat 'new ap~arance. License No. (193DJE) · :?:! s!"!'!.,(>e<d. rad io, hoater. License $ f6 8 8 No. (813CHH) • ~~~m~~~.A.!5>,,e.nno. radio. 11<•'•" $s·s 8 License No. rTZD26J) - ~~!A~~.~~u~lrans,alr,VNr.steer-, $14'8 8 ing, pwr. brakes, radio, w-wall tires, vinyl rodf. l iceose No. (X TK802) '70 IMPALA " v ... , auto. trans., .power steerlng, radio, helter, whitewall tires, Vinyl roof. License . ,..o. t022AZP> $1688 • '69 FORD V2 Ton P.U. Auto trans., nidlo, heater, dtx. tu-tone. License No. 2.f219E 166 FORD Cust. 500 Good solid transportatlon • .#SZB8TT ' :?Jv~~~~!~~~-.factoryair $33-rf.: condltonlng, full power, radio, heater, whltewall tires, vinyl roof, tinted glass, wheel · ' .. covers, landau top. Just like new I License No. 272EMR '71 CHATEAU WGN. 12 PASSENGER. V8, auto. trans., factory air conditioning~ p<JWer steering. Llctnse No. 249DJE. '67 BUICK WILDCAT., V-8, factory "•ir condltlontng, power steering, ~r bra.kes, radio, heater, whltewalltlres. License•No. (VOX343} '67 RIVIERA V-8, aUjo. trans., factory air conditioning, iiow-r • steering, power brakes, power windows, radio, hNt•, vinyl roof, License No. (TUt:tlOCI) '69 Pl YM. FURY . . 4 door, V-8, auto. trans., fKtorv air condition .. ~'11. power steerlng,rldlo,helter. Llunse No. ZKJQ. . • ' I ,. 988 ' \ • ...... . -• San Clemente Capistrano • VOL 66, NO. 241, 7 SECTIONS, 88 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1973 Five Hurt as LA-hound Jet Jolted • Ill • LOS ANGELES (AP) -Five women were injured , one critically with a broken ne:c~. when a Trans World Airlines Boeing 1Cfl was jolted as It approached Los Angeles lntemaUonal Airport. • . TWA sad the mishap Tuesday night was caused by mechanical failure or air turbuJence. An investigation is under way. A passenger, Ann Clemente of San Diego, said "For a minute, it feJt like we were at the Promised Land. jl'I'here were people behind rile praying. We were nying through the air. We were bounced around quite a bit ." The women, In cl u ding two stewardesses, were standing up when the plane shook, TWA said. Marge Payette 'of Huntington Beach, was in critical condition with a broken neck at Centinela Valley Community Hospilal. Two others were bospitaUzed with lesser injuries. They were identifleQ as El len Hargitay, 31, of Los Angeles, with a sprained hand and a possible back in- jury, and Te·sun Hse, 16, of Taiwan, with a broken jaw and a possible fractured skull. The stewardesses. were treated at the hospital and released. 1bey were iden- tified as Ellen Chapiro, 21 , of Honolul_u, and Betty Gray, 30, of Steamboat Springs, Colo. Hospital spokesman said both suffered lower back injuries. United Press International quoted one passenger saying there was a lot of 11praying out loud." "People were touching the ceiling and coming down," said John Adams of Norton; Mass. "It was really chaos." "A couple of people fell very badly. The people who were ~t in their seats, they were the one1 who got hurt.'' Adams said there was no warning to fasten seat belts. He added, there was "no panic." '!be spokesman said a military doctor traveling on flight 712 from Hong Kong via Okinawa, Taiwan, Guam and Honolulu aided the injured before the jeUiner landed. 'Ibere were 132 passengers and nine crew members aboard the flight, scheduled to terminate in San Francisco. Passengers were sent to San Francisco aboard other planes. TWA spokesman Mike Leon said the cause of the accident "could have been one of two things -clear air turbulence or a mechanical malfunction in parts of the tail. "'lbe captain seemed to indicate there was a maliunction of the trim tab or elevator control. As yet, we have not con- Miss Agnew Threatened During Brazilian Trip . Nixon Takes Freew ay Trip President Nixon went for another drive on the California freeways, accompanied by his wife, Pat, and daughter, Tricia Nixon Cox. Escorted by two Secret Service cars, the Nlxons stopped Tuesday for an hour at· Red Beach inside the camp Pendleton Marine base. The Western White House did not announce the President's excursion until the Nixons had arrived at the beach. A news media car that attempted to follow them found its path blocked by the Secret Service. ii.ltr Pllol St.ti, ...... ' . I MONDAY WILL BE LAST DAY FOR l'AllM.()RIENTED, SEVEN-ACRE AMUSEMENT PARK Nettled In a Ca nion off crwn.iliil'-J'~irJtwoj,~"u...r to a. COWboy c.!¥9,~ . . I I Old Me~n·ald!'s Clos·ing, ~ - Missi on Viej o Amu,seine nt Farm Not Paying Off By JAN WOR'l'll Of ... o.llf' "'"' ..... ~ "This thing musta gone around a jillion limes," Fulton Shaw said with a smile as he and hll wife Kay climbed on to the old-fashioned mule-driven carousel for a photogl'aph. nie port, Old McDonald's Farm in Mission Viejo, was deserted, except for the squawking of chickens and an oc- Caslonal pig's grunt. , !'I: Since last September, \he seven-a~ farm-oriented children's amusement park has been open only,_ on weekends. Now e\len that compromise bas proved Wlprofitable, and the Shaws, owners of the to! spot, have decided to close it down. Monday will be the last day ol opera- tion. 111ougb Shaw said good naturedly be and bls wife are "just two happy failures," there's little chance the two will settle !or lnacUvlly. Shaw, a Callfomla native, has been an animal trainer for 35 years. At Old McDonald's Fann bi1 trained rabbit, Buck Bumy, rode a cart down a hill. A . COUCH, CHAIR DRAW RESPONSE SUcctP stories are oot 11 rare u you might think. Look at this one: • 6' COUCH & malehlng chair, Gold " white. Almost now. $50. (Phone No.) Thia Diiiy Pllol advertiser had II calls the Orsi nlghll '!be llem w11 oold, of course, and another succesa story was written. Oor Ad·vllor can hclp yoo write 1""r own success atory. Dial her dlrect- flNl?I. ' ,. pig went down a slide. Chickens rang bells. He fig\ires h1s training talent will come in handy in televlsloo and film work. Kay Shaw, who met Fulton when ""!Y were both working at Knott's Berry Farm, speQ.u.e. in children's acllvities and during Old M1cDOnald1s four years in Mission Viejo ahe has catered hun- dreds of birthday parties for children GD the grounds. f~ The Shaws ·hope to dl?ect thetr-effOrts to educational te}tVitlon. Of the 75 domestic animals at the Cann, including 111bbits, exQtic breeds of chickens. burrows, mules, goats, pigs and turtles, the Shaws will ketp only the ra~ bl ts. . 1be rest will be sold, possibly to two similar companies who specialize in the same kind of entertainment. '"Ibis Is a sad decision," Mrs. Shaw said. "Even if we go inio children's TV ~ms or com~rtj_als, .we 'll miss all the little ui. we:v; bail~."· 0 We've ntver mide IDY. money here," Shaw· added. 0 We made a lot at KnoU's . (S••»FARM, PlllO Z) - Capo Beach Publisher Maps Hors e Th~f . War A C.ptstrano Beach m a g a z I n e P\lbllsber has declared war on horse thieves, launching a nallonwlde project calculated to make It easltr for police to find the stolen anl1111la. Bob Tallent, the publisher, launched a program which amounts to two printed lonT11 -one !or bones; the other !or all horse owners. Besides giving apace !or a verbal description of each animal the forms have tine drawings where owners can odd brands or other distinguishing mark· lngs ol their animal. Locally, the Orange Coonty Sheriff's Office has been dlspeosing the forms to all horse owners who ask for tl\Cm . Once completed, the documents go into an owner's personal rue and If the animal •trays or Is Jost or stolen, the fonn Is turned over to law enlorcem<nt olllecni to expedite recovery. Spo~ fer the effort have cited• an atanning increase in horse theft all over the · natioo. Along .the South Coonty severall major casea have turned up as well. . Tall~nt1 wlio publjJbes lforse and ltorseman Magazine -as well as other outdoor><>rlented magazines -launched lbe project alter first consulting with the l<>s Allceles fllunty Sber!!rs Office. Since then the program has spread lo law agencies In Orange, Son Diego and San Bemanllno counues. He said that 111 far hla magazine has processed about 300 req..,la !or the rorms from h~ owners. No lee la charged !or the iervlce and locally pie docwnenla are avallable from Sllertlrs lnYellllgator Ernie Plttsen- bU'ger at 834-3000. Daughter's USS Hope Trip Ends ' W.ASJllNG'l'ON' (UPI). -:vlco ""'91- "There are certain times when the President wants to be private," leputy press secretary Gerald L. Warren told reporters. Nixon Sure No Recession dent Spiro T. Agnew's daulllter SU!ln Ar d B d cut· short a voyage Oil the bospiia! a!li.P oun en USS Hope bi.co-al -'li'"mi ber lllo-• ' .• ' ' mJde i!\ ar,zi!, ID Agne! spokeomm said lodq. ' -'l'llOmaon, the '1ee prtlidall'I preas oecretuy', Slid the' lamDy Dlllde ... judgmelit • • • no! to toke .,, ·luriW risks" and arranPI to have the :11-year- old' Miss Af,Dl!fl "1urn to Wubinllm- Mlss Agnew, who sailed aboard the H¥ in February with the intentkln ol returning in Deoonber, WOrked with audJo.visual ecluclitlon equipment. "There had been tbreala on her life down there (Brazil) and although the Brazlllans thought they could take care of the situation and the vice preslc\ellt hu expressed confidence in the ability of the Brazilian government to provide necessary security, as a fatbet be wanted to take the prudent measure of bringing her closer to homo," 'lbom9on said. The Washington Star-News repol'U!d to- day that Dr. William Walsh, who founded Project Hope undel' which the ship saJla on bwnanillrian mlssiooa, uld boll> be and MlS8 Agne" received.several-Unala -incl~ one Jast week that could not be Ignored. "This was a threat which we felt was more serious and · American Intelligence. agreed with Brazilian intelligence," Walsh told the Star-News. "The Brazilians felt she was worth a great deal in ransom in e:rcbange for political p r i s on e r s and their responsibility was greater . than ours," said Walsh. Miss Agnew told the Slar·Newa that her return had nothing to do with the in- vestigation of her father In connection with alleged kic:kbacka from Maryland contractors. On that score, she wu quoted as saying: " ... I don't feel any cause for cOocem because l kno'.t my father is an -booestper!Olh" Heat Threatens Power Supplies In East St.ates By De Aaocloted Pr.- With IQO.degree temperatues threaten• ing, the New York State Power Pool put a stat.Wide !Ive percent wltage.reduc:tloD into ellect today. Other uW!Ues on the East Coaat and In tho Midwest braced !or aoolher bout with llOV.,. electric powr' demands aa the wave of hot, muggy air hq on. nie cutback In New ,vort· came three boors earlier thab thO 5 per<ent cut T\K!sday which the pool lald mabled It to meet a ~rd cl!mlalld or 11a32,000 kilowatts at mldaftemoon. Tempenturo: In the mid-IOs callled mwlve con- sumption of electricity by air con- dlUoners and some power failures were reported. /, apokeaman forecast that todoY'.• de- mand aloo would pass 20 mllllon kilowatts. Auto companies closed down several Midwestern planla because of the heat w•ve, wblle eome 7lO awtlterlna (See BEAT, Pap I) \,\ By HELEN THOMA!. u.tlilil """' '' )JI I ..-;Prealdeot Nixon II c:oof1o1enl Ihm! will be; "" -loo 1!"\ f!,11' "!Id does nol ~plat. a tax. IDcrnae,.aCconllng to a White House spokesman. Deputy Press SOcreWy GtraJd L. Warren said Tuesday the ch1ef executive ts coofident that government .. ponaored economic policies and b u d g e t a r y restraints ''will bring inflation down to rtHODabJe le~els." 1be President is "of ·course concerned about the infiationary·sltuatlon," Warren told reporten. But be pointed out that Nixon's chief economic advisers, including Treasury Secretary George P: Sllultz anoi· Herbert Stein, chairman of the Coundl of Economic Advisers , "feel strongly a balaDced budget can be achieved this 'YOll',and·that woold obvioully,uegate any need for a tu increase tills year." Nixon promised in the last election campaign ll)ere woUld be oo federal tax boost. He has spent aome of bis working hours at the Western White House reviewing the status of. the economy. Warren explained that Nixon feels price stability will return and the overall ecooomic situati~ wW i m p r o v e "because of the work being done by all segments of the government, including the budget reslralnts on future plan- ning." Meanwhile, the bill to lncreare the minimum wage from $1.60 to $2.20 per hour was at the White House awaiting acllon by the President. NIJDD oppooed the '"81aJalloo while It was under cooslderalion by Ccngreoa, but the AFLCIO bu made a majot: effort urging the Presldeul to lign the 'bill. It is now being reviewed. by. . the ad· minlstralion's budget ·experta. '!be President plans to end bis CaJllomla slay tater· t:JJa w..t ·and will head for bis Camp David, ~d., moun- taintop retreat for a Labor Day weekend With bis family. 2 ,Plead Guilt y In Big Seizure Of LSD, Pot SAN DIEGO (AP) -Two men have pleaded gullly in a cut Involving an um seizure ileaCrlbed 'by ofncen as tho lariest ever In the United Slates. Clarence F. Balcbelder1 44, of El C.· jon, and his !Oft Robert, 24 of Santee pleaded gully Tuesday to conspiracy to distribute LSD and marijuana. The mari- juana was seized at the same Ume, A £edenl grand jury has Indicted nine other pe....., in connectioo with a hall pQWld of LSD found by olflceni In January. Narcotles oUil'<ni place the street ... le value or the halluclnocenic drug at more thin $10 million. • '.J'oday's Final TEN CENTS Flight firmed that. There was no vis.ibte damage to the plane. They've got the plane in :1 hangar and our peoplt are still going over it." The trim tab and elevator control keep the aircraft level when it climbs or descends. The pilot, J. W. Harpster of San Fran- cisco, reported the jetliner experienced "a violent shaking for a few seconds" while it was descending from Its cruising altitude of 33,000 feet and still some 2S minutes out at sea. Joint Meei On Plans Set ~onight San Clemente city councilmen and their advisory commissioners w i 11 discuss several major items -mostly related to pl aMing in the city -at a quarterly joint study session tonight. The meeting will be an 1.D1official one and will n'lt result in any fonnal actions, cit~ aides said. Heading the list of discussion topics will be the new project calculated to yield a parJdng study for the city's commercial areas. COuncilmen already h a v e allocated the cash for the $23,000 project to be done by the VTN consulting firm of Irvine but thus far the project has not yet been laWlched. Other items coming up for di!cussion after a 6:30 p.m. dinner at the go!! course clubhouse will include: -The status of a request for Jease renewal from the San Clemente Boat Chm. '!be Issue already bas stirred con- troversy before parks and recreation commissioners. Several members have queatloned the proprtety of a prtvate club uatng public facilities. -Discussion of master plans for development of Bonita Canyon and Llnda Lane Parlu, both of which will become sub~ for a grant application to Orange County under a regional park program. Before the grants coold be ap- plied for, the city has to prepare the definitive development program for each project. -continued dlscussion of proposals that th~ . city set up either Ji zoning ad- truniStrator or Board of Zoning Ad~ justment (BOZA) to take some rudimerr tary ~uties off the crowded planning corrurussion agendas. Initial proPosals came up early this year at a similar study session but no finn plans have yet been drawn up for the new function wblch would deal with routine mnlng matters. · Although tonight's session must be a public -ting city olllcials, primarily Mayor Clifton Myers, have appealed to clttzens to try to avoid turning the seminar into a public hearing. "This is lhe only chance we have ta get together and study deeply the issues fac- ing the city in the future , and if we get too much discussion from an audience, it cuts sharply Into our limited time " he said. • Fren ch Silent Still PAPEETE, Tahiti (UPI) -French of· ficials maintained silence today on New Zealand and Australian reports that France sel off the llllh in its con- troversial 1973 nuclear blut series in the Pacllie. Oraage Coast We adler The sun will peek thfOUib those low clouds Thursday morning leav- ing the rest of the day fairly sunny. !Ughs will range from 'Ill at the beaches to 75 inland. -OVemigbl lows 6.\.65, INSIDE TODAV It ...,• P•Y limo In New Yorio -even thougl~ thet1 lost miser- cbl~. Tht homostzual commu- nity played tht police depart- m .. t In • fn...dly bastboll gmite to lnt1<r thtir image. SUJ'11 ?age 7. • • . " Otltr L'JIOI Still L'llol1 FULTON ANO KAY SHAW ARE "JUST TWO HAPPY FAILURES" WHO WILL KEEP BUSY S.ven·1cre Old McDon1ld's Firm in Mission Vl•jo W11 Quiet Except for Squawking Chicke ns j;Board to Study Sires ' . From Page l FARM • • • For New Juvenile Hall but when we moved dowil here there seemed to be some confusion in the public's mind about where we were and who we were." • ,. ' ' ' • • • • • ; I . • I Six choices for a second Juvenile Hall, •ll in the southwest part of the county , ~egeu~f~i~rt~ i~~':;ge C:Ounty Board · The board members sent the list lo the COWlty administrative office and the pro- bation department for a report on the ad- visability of decentralization. The report is due in 60 days. · Sites suggested, their location and estimated cost: • County Awards $600,000 Gift For Golf Course · Granting the largest chunk of federal revenue-sharing funds yet given to any OraJl8e County community, County Board of Supervisors Tuesday gave 5600,000 to Huntington Beach for the purcha.se of Meadowlark Golf Course. The sum also will help buy a camping area adjacent to the tree-dotted , lll-hole Coorse near Meadowlark Airport. The mly grant approaching Hun- tington Beach's during the board ol supervisors' allocation session Tuesday was $500,000 earmarked for Lake Placen- tia Park in Fullerton. I The county Harbors, Beaches and Parks Commission had recommended '"°·000 be alloted to Huntington Beach for the golf course purchase. lfwitington Beach City Admlnistrator David Rowl ands said the city has until ~ Sept. 2.3 to develop a plan to purchase the 1 110-acre parcel. He told supenrisors lhe city will use some of its own revenue-sharing funds and is considering issuing revenue bonds, based on projected receipts of the j:>o_eular golf course. Property owners had been approached by housing developers, but gave the city the option of obtaining the ?i-1eado\\·lark fa cility as a public recreation area. Rowlands said 100,000 people use the golf course each year and that one-third 'of it is an important archeological site. ·He also agreed that part of the course could be used for bicycle trails. Other projects approved, as recom- mended by the county Harbors, Beaches 'and Parks Commiss ion. include S200.000 for the FountJin \'alley Recreation Center. ' Also alloted ~'<"IS $100,000 for Laguna's ~1ain Beach: $100.000 for a view park in Corona del 1\Iar and $40,000 for a wharf park in Newport Beach. OIAMel COAST DAILY PILOT TIM Ort<IOI Co.it ~ILY ~ILOl, will! -.ldl II tomb1Mll 1111 Ntw1•Pl'ft1, It pUl)l!iJ'IM ... IN Ortf!9t Co11t P1111111111n11 COl'n!N11r. SfP'· rile K IUon1 •re PVblli.lllld, Morii11r lftrowll FrljSly. !or Cost• ""•· N,.,.PG•I 8ucl!, H1111!11141!011 lh«ll/F°""tll11 Vllllf'I u11- 8Md'I, lrvllltl~lftftk tl'ld S111 i:'--lt l SMI J11911 C1pl11r-. A 1IP111lt tetrloMI lldllkHI k ~hll.o Sillll'MVI -Sllf'lll•t1· TM ,,,111c:i.-1 publlf~l"f ""'' 11 11 llD Wnl ltr Strttl, Cot.II Mn1, CIH~r"ll, f2'2' ll:ob11t N. W1.4 ,.tftlllM ..... ,.'*lltlltr J•ck II.. C11rl1y \loC.f ""-i..M .... Girlttol MtMMr Thel'l1t K11vil l!llltot Th-•• A. M11rphf~o MMtlllfte !.llltor Ch1rl•• H. t..01 RiM114 P. Nill AttllMfll ~-~lflt.n S. Cl a t tlo~ JOI Norlt! £J C-lne lool, t261Z --C.11 ... , ,. WOii lly ...... H...,.,f ltolcll: »# l'lllO'llOrt ... llv1r1 Hllntlt4illll loMfl: .,.,. •#ell """"-111 ~ t.dl1 m ,.,.., • ....,. hi J' 111 f714 t 64MJJ1 Cl•1lftM AMrtfe~ '41-1171 ... Cll r 11k A• D1pwt I ft: Tai ;l 111 4t2-44Jt (OfYl' ..... 1, 1m. °'11'111 C.0.11 "'*"i.lllllf ~,. "' ,.... ....... lllWl11'01iolll. ••!Wfel --" .. ""''~ '*"'' Mir M .I ........ "'"*" ....... _.. "''""" .. ....,., ....,. ..... dMo _,... ,. .. It C..• Mn1, Ce,,,..,._ .,._lltlM 11'1' COHW U.U _,,_., W ....... U.U ~irl llJIHWWY ... , •• 11 ...... ~. -42.7 acres at the intersection of Crown VaUey Parkway and the San Diego Freeway, $660,000. -'1.7.7 acres at the same location, $700,000. ' -23 acres at Alicia Parkway and Al iso Creek Road, $460,000. -25 acres La Paz. Road and Aliso Creek Road, $675,llOO. -25 acres at La Paz. Road and Moulton Parkway, $520,000. (The latter two are near the North American unoccupied plant in Laguna Niguel ). -30 acres on the Ortega Highway, eight miles from the San Diego Freeway on the Starr Ranch, $150,llOO. The last site was considered to be too remote to be serklllsly considered for the Juvenile Hall locaUon. The proposed facility would have 100 beds and be expandable to 300 beds. There was no comment by residents of the area at Tuesday's meetings. Ex-convict Held In Brutal Ki11ing SAN PABLO (AP) -A former San Quentin prison inmate has been arrested for investigation of murder in the death of another ex..eonvict whose bullet·rlddled body was found in a car trunk, police said. Aeling on an anonymous tip Tue sday, police took James ''S horty '' Schreckengost, 35, into custody in con- nection with the shooting of Greg Rice, 28, of Richmond. Rice's wife reported her husband miss- ing and on Friday, Richmond police received a telephone tip that he had been shot and left in his car. They said they love the 1ocation, leased from the Mission Viejo C:Ompany. Nesti· ed in a little canyon off Crown Valley Parkway, the spot used to be a camp for cowboys of the original Pitission Viejo land company. Its tall eucalyP.tus · and pepper trees \\·ere carefully preserved when the animal park was built four years ago. "We're proud that we've ma~ our Jiv- ing in an honest way,'' Shaw said. "\Ve've made a tot of kids happy." l\.1any of the old·fashioned blacksmith equipment, harnesses, carriages, and saddles adding an · authentic flavor to the park are those which Shaw collected and repaired at his ~acre farm home in San Juan Capistrano. ~couple have Jived on the fann for 17 years. Shaw said.the favorite animal act over the years bas been BuCk ~. a Siamese rabbit who rode a rolling cart down a ramp. But one of the' most intelligent domestic animals, Shaw has learned, is the lowly pig. ''I've taugbt pigs~ tO, take thtir own showers, tuni Cif1 a radio, sit at a table, and eat ice cream," he said. Chickens are valuable for their depen· dabilily, not their genius. "I've got one chicken tha t's worked for me 12 years," Shaw said. Complaints Revealed \VASH1NGTON (AP) -Numerous complaints about radio and flight in-- strument.s were recorded in the flight Jogs or the Delta Air Lines jet that crash· ed at Boston July 31, the National Transportation Safety Board said today. Eighty-eight of the 89 persons aboard the night were killed when the DC-9 jet crashed into a seawall short of the runway at Logan International Airport. Bay Ownership Jur y Probing Supervis or Action By JOHN ZALLER Of 1!11 01i!J' L'llot Siii! The Orange County Grand Jury is con· ducting an investigation to see if Orange Cowity su pervisors are moving fast enough toward bringing Upper Newport Bay into public ownership, it was learned today. Marcia Bents, grand jury foreman, said the purpose ol the inquiry Is "to see that the board of supervisors really ac- complishes something" in its efforts to acquire the Upper Bay . Mrs. Bents stressed that the in- vestigation is part of the grand jury's "ongoing effort to monitor the operations of all phases of county government. "We are not sure at this Point \vhether we "ill issue a report or not,'' l\.1rs. Bents said. "If the effort to acquire the bay Is mov- ing too slou•ly ~·e ~·Ill have something to say." she declared. "If good progress is being made. we may .keep quiet," she said, ''but ~·e do want to make sure that the county keeps W elf a1·e Leader Guilty of Fra11d EL CENTRO (AP) -'Ille president of the Welfare Rights OrganliaUon he.re has been convicted of welfare fraud. ~1ary McGraw, 26, was convicted Mon- day of a mlsdemeanor charge in Imperial Justice Court. She was sen· tenced to 30 days in jail, but It w11s suspended on U1e condition she pay $315 fine and agree to two yean probation, court officials said. M1.u McGraw wu 1ccu..ed of being employed during Deoonber and January, but had •ltD>ed • ronn saylns she was unemployed at l!Je time. ) up the effort to bring the bay into public o"·nership." The Irvine C:Ompany last April offered its Upper Bay holdings to whatever public agencies are interested in them, saying tenns of a land sale or trade could be ,\·orked out later. The company said it was willing to ac- cept any reasonable terms of purchase and stressed that it hoped the public could assume possession o( the Upper Bay as soon as possible. , A Joint federal. State, county and city agency -the Upper Bay Fie)d Com- mittee -has been meeting regularly in an effort to work out an agreement with the company. There has been little tangible progress during those five months, however. The offer had been made under the threat of a prescriptive rights lawsuit by the county. J\frs. Bents acknowledged tha t there have been complaints that certain supervisors have employed delaying tao- lics and said the "Grand Jury's en- viroomental committee is fol.lowing them up. She said infonnaUon has been re- quested from a number of sources.in an erfort to evaluate the efforts of the board of supervison. Filth District Supervisor. Ron a Id Caspers ol Newport Beach, chalnnan of the county board, I! one of those the Grand Jury asked to comment on tbe prog:ress of negotiatiorui. caspers aald be ls preparing 1 written commentary contalntng his views, but would not comment dlrecUy on the -re- queAt. However, he did express "concern" over what he called "footdrawog" by the board t.s a whole. "All the pubUc aienctes on the Fleld Commlttee art eager to get golna:." Caspers .. Id. "It b Cll\y the County of °"'"'• that doetn't ...., to be In a llW' ry." Quake Toll Climbing 500 Feared Dead in Mex ico City A rea . MEJl!CO CITY (UPI) -The death toll in TueidaY'• · earthq~ke moWlted steadi- ly today, and by dawn the Mexican prosldency was reporting "about 500 dead." One Mexico City newspaper put !he toll at 9'l4. The Mexico City daily El Heraldo sald 600 died. Other counts ran between 400 * * * Domes DestrOff,ed and 600. ,. At least 2,000 persons were reported in- jured and tens of thousands left homeless. As dawn broke, survivors dug through the ruins of their homes. The dead were laid out in private h0me11, local hospitals and blankets under the streets. Some Survivors of Earthquake Numbed by Ruin s, Dead ORIZABA, Mexico (UPI I -A gray· haired woman dug through a waist·hlgh rock pile that used to be her borne. A middle-aged man watched silently while wreckers tore at huge concrete slabs that cover a whole city block. It was an apartment house before the quake . Marine Trwl Jury Excused For One Day The man , Miguel Angel Cisneros, used to live there. His sister died there. Orizaba is in a daze, Hke the woman digging through the rocks, still not show- ing emotion. The town, nesUed in a green alpine valley In the Mexican Sierra 1itadre mountains, was hit Tuesday by the worst of a.violent earthquake that rocked most of central ,Mexico. There was oo electric power. No drink- ing water. Trafflc ran in detours around the streets, filled with fallen bricks, adobe, wood. cement and glass. People gathered in darkened cafes and on street comrs. "Where were you wpen it hit?" they asked each other. Many stood to watch the crews clear the wreckage. An Orange County Superior Court jury Cranes and bulldozers helped with the that must eventually detennine the guilt big pieces. One group tied a cable to a or innocence of accused El Toro Marine damaged building. They pulled until the Sgt. Jared Allan Wallace got a day off wall tumbled down in a cloud of dust . from the murder trial today to allow Occasionally, 11 Red Cross ambulance Judge Raymond Vincent and the two sped off, whining, carrying another body lawyers involved to prepare jury in-taken from underneath the wreckage. slructlons. The Packard Building, a three-story Judge Vincent excused the panel late apartment complex, was once a Tuesday after deputy public defender landmark here on the city's main Ron Butler completed his case in answer avenue. to charges of murder, rape and kidnap. Half of It collapsed. Its 100 sleeping oc- Butler and prosecut(>r Robert Chat· cupants were all feared dead. terton said they will deliver final Cisneros shared a first floor apartment arguments to the jury Thursday after with hi! sister. He spent Tuesday night brief rebuttal testimony from further with bis mother, in her house, and lived. were sllll under the debrl1. . The death toll rose as reports came tn from outJying 1{illages and crews <.'On· tinued to clear the wreckage. Rain ripped the area Tuesday night bot cleared by dawn. Residents took little notice of It. , . In the quake-stricken area surroundu~g the !8,700-foot Orizaba volcano, debris stood still scattered on the streets of .several large towns and a multi!ude of viU8ge1. Ambulances ran from the Orizaba Valley Ciudad Serdan and other heavily· hit ar~as to ho.spltals in nearby sta te capitals. Traffic In the area .,.,·as packed wlth volunteer cars carrying the Red Cross banner. At the town hall Jn Orizaba officials were coordinating reports from outlying villages. Those who Jost their oome.s stood in line outside the building walling to report the losses. Waverly Person of the National Earth- quake lnfonnation Center in Boulder, Colo., said the quake appeared to be the worst in ?\1exico's modern history in terms of loss or life. The early morning quake, centered in fault lines deep und er f\fexico's moun- tainous central spine, registered 7 on the Richter Scale -more powerful than the December quake in t.ianagua, Nicaragua that killed 5,000 persons. The 1'1anagua quake had a Richter intensity of 6.2 •• Hardest hit in Tuesday's quake was the town of Orizaba, caught in the epicenter of the giant temblor. A three-story apartment building in the community of 50,000 persons 150 miles east-southeast of Mexico City collapsed, killing more than 100 tenants asleep ln· side. Mexican President Luis Echeverria was en route today to the devastated zone around Orizaba. Thousand were left \\'ithout homes. Red Cross officials said about 800 persons were injured. They estimated 100 persons died in Quecholac in Puebla State ; 80 in Ciudad Cerdan, 178 in Orizaba, two in Puebla and two in C:Ordoba In Veracruz; State. Others died in scattered areas. F"°"' r.,e l HEAT • • • witnesses. His sister died beneath the concrete. Wallace, 26, deruel:i tram the witness "That's my stuff they 're taking out workers at two other plants simply walk· •I.Ind that he ra;; Ind.' 1trengled now," he hid, pointing to a ,~ ed off their Jobs. coetta!I waitress N te PW, 2'1, ol mattre!S. "That'• where they IOW>d my New York City sulfered throuc)i a FolDltain Valley l1Bt eb. 9. .sister." year-high temperature of 98 Tuesday a.a 'Ibe veteran of tw.s Vietnam tours to1d He stared at the wreckage with dry, Consolidated Edi.9on reported a record the jury he was "nowhere near" the unblinking eyes. power demand of 8,Ull megawatts. Tbt Huntinfton Beach area in the hours An ambulance was called as wreckers temperature-humidity index hit 85, whlcb before Mrs. Post'f rude bodl' was pulled out a body. a spokemi:an for the National Weather· t!ltccvered. ' .f t-;"l "That'fothe Itrier, i lojet ~name. Service said tne111t "utter irua,ry." Waif ace told the jury that he suffered a But he was ""' oHriy nelgbbon. ' The power pool got 110fi megawatts of memory lapse five daya earlier when be extra electricity from the Ontario alleaedly kldnaped South Laguna X-ray Hydroelectric Power Commission In technician Carole Ann Rowan. Canada, which also supplied more than Miss Rowan, 24, told the jury she was Bomb Suspect 1,llOO megawatts to Michigan uOllties. responding to an emergency call from a In Washington, the tempera ture reach-· San Clemente 'hospital when Wallace ed 'II and the capital's metropolitan area orden!d her to halt her car near the Faces Cliarges was under an air polluUon alert for the beach cities offramp of the San Diego ' 17th day thb summer. Hot, stagnant air Freeway. / holding pollution over the area was not She said Wallact, v.·ho worked as a WASH1NGTON (AP) -The expected to dissipate before FTidAy. ti 't rd f the Misslo Postal Service annouriced the in-'" part me seeun Y gua or n A spokesman for the V'·gln'1a Electric v·ei·o Company and Fountain Valley dlctment in Boston today of Joseph "' 1 & Power Co. in Richmond ••'d the utility Pl••• ordered her at gUDpom· t to put L. Belculfine, 37, on a charge of ....... iu.a, had a record power demalld of 7,100 handcuffs on her wrists. malling the bomb that exploded in Miu Rowan said she struggled with the south J>O.'lal annex in Boston megawatts Tuesday. Wallace to the polnt that the Marine July 25. In the Detroit area, where the tem- sergeant pulled over to the side of the Three postal employes were in-perature reached 98 union officials p~ freeway and she WB! able to leap from jured in the explosion. ded Chrysler Corp. lnto closing Its his ear. Chief Postal Inspector William J. engine and assembly plant.s In Warren, \\'allace testified that hls memory went Cotter said the federal grand jury Mich. and Windsor, Ont., sending 4,700 blank from the time he was questioning a indictment charges Belculfine with workers home. woman trespasser in the Misskln Viejo violating federal law which carries American Motors decided to close lls area to a few hours later when he reahz· a maximum penalty of up to 20 Kenosha assembly and Milwaukee body ed that Miss Rowan was riding with him years imprisonment. plants in Wisconsin as well as a jeep in his car. ----'============:!_...:f".'ac~illty In Toledo, Ohio. f I f Sox-Wickdry-Cotton Tube-Temis Shoes-Basketball-Tennis Fll9tball-All Purpose Gym Pants-ReYersible T·Shirts Wam11p SUits SWeat Sails Tennis Rackets Handball Gloves Racquetball Racquets Spndo Swim Sutts Open 9 to 6 Closed Sundays Basketbans Yoney Bans & Nets Footballs Playground Balls Duckf eet Fins Water Wonder Boards Skate Boards Back Packs Slae~ing B:~s C::k Brr;s lll:~Jiib Eik~s Repairilg-Tires-Tubes ClOSID IUMDAf • • PUBUC NOTICE ,.ICTITIOUI IUllNl'.S.S NAMI ITATIMENT 'Lively' at 90 'Tl'lt lollowlng perlOl'I 11 dol1111 t11.11!f\fillt '" SYSTEMS ANAL Ytl$ C:OMPANV, 1114 T1hlll Orlvt, co.ii Mt11, Ct lll. '2f26 Widow Cleared ,L• O.vfd O.v!wm, ltM T1Ntr Or. COlll ~. C1Ht. 92tM • Thi• M IMtt 11 c:onovctld bV 111 In· <1lvld1NI. LM 0. Otvluon Thll 1!tltn'lenl W81 !lltd Wiii! ttle CO\ln• tr Cltrk Df Or•no• Cwntv on A119ut1 f, lfll. In Heroin Ca se '""' Plllll!t.lwd Ortnii. CN~t Diiiy Piiot, A\lf\l.i a. 1), u n. it7J 2Ul-n PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUS IUSINllS NAMI ITATIMIMT Tiit' tollowino peraon1 art doing bu1ll'lfll I I ! PHOTOGltAPHEltS WEST, 1'30 Iowa, Cotti' Mew, C1Ut. t2t2f Clvltlltn ()wotn l.011ltr1, P.O. Box 151, F911ow$ Ytchl Ltlldll'IQI, WHml119ton, C•llf, f07.U JlllM 0.tn MCCl.lllOlllJh, l•lO low1, co.11 MIM, cant, n.26 lhll blnlllell II C01>41vclltd bV t Offltrll pertntrtfllp, Chrl1tl111 o . Lonr1r1 Tll11 ll•ltmtnl Wll tltl'd With ,.,. Coun· tv Cltrk 01 Or•no• 'ountv on A11911•• t. 1973, '"'" ~llllll111td Or1n111 CNtl Danv Piiot, Al.llMt t. 1~. 22. 2', 1'73 2•32·7> PUBLIC NOTICE SL,·lft su .. 11101 COUIT Ofl TH I STATI OF CALll"OINIA 1"01 TMI COUNTY OF OJlAHOI H•. A·17:15' HOTICI 0, MIAllNO O' fll!TITIOM flOJl "11:01ATI 01' Will. ANO ,OR LITTl!RS TESTAMENTARY Elllll• 111 AN$0N R. H~HER, JR ., 0.CMHd. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN thll FtRST HATIOHAL BANK OF ORANGE COUNTY !lai fllff l'ltr!ln • P.tlll;in tor Probat• of Wiil •Mil f o r Lelltr1 T .. l•rntnt1..y ttltrtll('.t IO w 111 (II 11 l'l'llldt. IW turll'Mlr Pfirllcul1ri, •lld ttwll tM lll'l'lt ti'ld ol''' ot 1M1rl"9 IF!t lllM Mi bffft Ml IOI' $epl, ,, lt73, '' ':00 1.m .. In IF!e court.....,.,. of D~rt· mtnt Ho. 3 of wld cGUrt, •' 700 Cl~lc c.rter Dtlvt Wet!, In llM City ol S•nlt Ana, CtUIOl'nl•. Otled Al.Ill. 17, 1973. WILLIAM I!. SI JOHN,· Counly C11rk KALM.IACH, o.MAltCO, PHILADELPHIA (AP) -A 90-year-old widow who said she is friendly to neighborhood children and drug users has been acqliitted on chargers of peddling heroin. Frances Kelly, tried wilhout a jury, was described by Com. mon Pleas Judge Donald Weiss Tuesday as ' ' th e liveliest 90u'ear-old I've ever seen." HE LEFT TllE bench and helped Mrs. Kelly from the stand after she testified, de. nying she ever sold dru~ to anyone. Patrolman Herschel Van· diver said he arrested the "-'idow JuOC' 9 near her borne after she tried to run away, allegedly dropping t h r e e packets of a white powder conceaJed inside a matchbook. "He is not telling the truth," Mrs. Kelly told the judge. "I dropped nothing because 1 had nothin~ in my hands to drop!' She added she isn't spry enough to run frorn Police, nor is she able to attempt to climb' over a fence as Vandiver testified. good relationship with children in the old northeast P h i ladelp)iia neighborhood known as Fishtown . As to drug users, she said she befriended them, gave them 1ood. "Mostly they like lee tea ," she added. Mullin Release Disputed SACRAMENTO (AP ) Gov. Ronald Reagan says the jury foreman in the Herbert Mullin mass murder case was "uninformed" when he said Reagan was responsible along with Mullin £or the 10 murders in Santa Cruz County, In ail open letter after Mullins' conviction, ju ry foreman Ken Springe r said Mullin had been admitted five W:NAr .. & CH llllHOWOITH JlJ St. ''"•r It., L" Al!Mles. Clllf. *11 ~~· ,..., hli"""" P\lbl!lllltld Or•not Coa1t OtllY Pllol, A119u11 n. 23, ?t, lt7l ,.,,.,, ASKED BY THE judge ii ( BRIEFS J she knew why she was in court, Mrs. Kelly said: "They .., ________ ,., tell me I was a drug pusher." PUBLIC NOTICE Weiss went on: "What is a drug push«?" • ,,... ....+..vi.. nd IU .. l!RIOJl COUIT 0, THI "I've asked eve.,"""', a 1T•T• o, CALt,OflNt• ,o. I'm 511·11 Waitiog for the THI COUMTY OJI O•ANO• Nt. Ann• answer." NOTICE OF HEARING Of PETITION Mrs. Kelly sa1'd she had a FOR PROIATE OF WILL AN 0 . HOLOOAAl'H!C COOICtL AHO fOA l---'-'----'----~--·1 LETTERS TE$TAMENTJIRY UBLIC NOTICE E"tlt of ARSEN M. THOMA$, 0.CHI• p ... 1-----------1 NOTICE IS HEREllY' GIVEN Thi! NOTICE TO Cll l!01TOI\ ALICE N. THOMAS n11 !\Ito "«•In " H A 16Ut p1!lllon fol' Prop.tee o• Wiii •nd •· ur r Hologr1plllc Codlcll tnd tor 11iwu'I<• of Sul)fr!or Coud Of tt>t S!1te of C• Ol'n • Let11r1 T"l•mtnt•rv to !ht pe1111-IOI' ll'M Counh of Or1no•-r1ltrlfl(1 lo wlll<F! 1, m•dt fOI' furrn.f f1t1te or J ULIA FRANCES LEONARD, Pftllc\lllrl, Ind thtl ll'lt limt 1nd pit« Dt<l•M!d. of 11t1rlno 1111 ,,..,. Fl•• been 141 kW HOik• 11 FIN•bv glv"1 lo <rtd!IOl"I ot St ttfrlblt' 11 ltn. 1 t 00 I IM llMI •bov• n•mtd d~tdtnl IF!1! Ill P ' 1 ; •.m., n penoni lltvlng <l•lml 'll"lni;t lllt I.lid HUl1room of DtcNrtmtnl ~. l ot 1.11d 11«tcHnt 1,, required 10 1111 ltlelft. wltll c-1, •I 10ll Chile Genltr Ori,,. W"'' In tflt l.ltY V01K11trs In tl>I ottlce (I! llM City of S•n!t AM, C1lllornl1. '"' ,-.~of the lbO,,.' tnllllld cllllrt or o.1td •uouu :JO, 1m ' ' WI LLIAM E ST JOHN IO prltWfll llM!!'I w!IF! ll'>t t~Ul'V c 1y c-1,rt ' voucllt•• 1o ll'M t,11'\del"Jfgned •t rile otnu IUll:Kf: Wi'LLIAJ,!,S & SORINllN of R09ERT V, WASSON, WASSON. & ' OLSEN 1'31• Cr1n1Mw Blvd .. Torr1nc:t, '4t s.tlt OM'l'I II., Sllllt ,.. CA 9050s """'lc!'I 11 Ille pl•t• of bu$1 ..... ol ~:. ~~~=:· *14 llMI lll'ldllr1IQMd In 111 mtll.r1 ptrt1lnl"9 AnOn..-,1 IW· """'-ta JIM e111i. of .,(d dacedf"'' wllhJn tour P\lblllhtd 0.-•ntt Coist Otlly Piiot Montri1 111'1 !ht 11r1t publlc11ll1111 of tlll1 Auuu•' ,,, n . 29, 1tn 26.Js.73 ~~~id AUOu" 6• 1tn PUBLIC NOTICE CHARLES E. LEONARO Executor Of !ht Will ol wkl decld~t. IUPl•IM COURT-Of' TN•-•OlllT Y, WASSON STA.Tl Of' CAl.ll'OIHIA 'OW: WASSON a OLl•N~ THI COUlfTT 0, ORA.NOi 13214 Cl'9tltlltW 11¥0, MO. ~IS Tll'Tfft<e, CA .._, NOTICI 0, U.LI Ofl RIAL PRO'• A~• t.t ll&K\lllll' lll:TY IY .AOMINllTll:ATOlt AT P11bll1F!td Orlm!S C1111t D1llv J'llol, ,.IYATI SALi A119u11 •• IS. '1J, 29, 1973 2Ul·n PUBLIC NOTICE In tl!t mtlUr Of Ille "'I .. of JENNIE VINCENZA TEOESCO. OtcNMO. Notlc:t 11 llerfbY glv"" IMI, AL9ERT TEDESCO Ind LEONARD TEDESCO. co-NOTICI 01' UITEMTIOH TO Mll'llt1IUr1tor1 of !lie Hll lt of JENNIE Ol'OICATI! ·EASEMll!NT VINCENZA TEDESCO. dftuitd. Wltl ltU NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN '?lllll on •I Pl"l,,_11 ltle, !!) lllt hlghf1I Ind lht l>fll tr. 6th d•Y of All(lllll, 1tn. ll19t8011rd of bleldt<', "'"°"" ""' ,.,,.,, •nd <ondlllons Educ:ltlon of !ht lrvl111 Unll!lcl $CllOOI '*'-'"'""' rnentlortld, •lld . Wbltel lo Dhl•lct of or•no• Counlv, C•lltornl•. COl'!flr"'41tton bV Iha $ul)ff!or 1.ovr1, 1'11'110f' '6allllcl , ftnolutlon of lnll'nllon lo afl1r hlll"'"btr JO, 1'7l, •I llMI !lour Of ctlcllc•!e • an ''"""~I lo SOU!lle<'n t :Jlil 1.m., OI' ttllrMrt.r wltllln lllt tlmt C•tlfOl'nl• Edllon Cornp.eny, • pUt>llc utlll· •II,,,.,.. tl'f lw, •I t11t ofll<t ol ltOSERT Iv comot•tlon, fol' und«;rouncl etec:fr1c Jl. WYATT, ATTORNEY tor uld CO«I· trantml!ilon U11t OUl'JIOlel to HTYI ttll mlnl1tr1ton. II 101&1 LO. Jlltml!o. Blvd., Col)t<)I p11t Elemen11rv SChoot, Mid Lo. At•mllos, C1llforn/1, •II !!It rJ9F!t, 11· llMfTltnl lo bl loc1ttd over, undoer Ind tit, lllfff'"I, ind ••1•1• "' fl'lt dlct•Md. •ere•• portion• of tlltt !flld jHrc• of land Ind Ill lhl rlol!I, l!IM, lnt~rtit, Ind nl•lt loc:•led 11 CMtttrr•I 11\d Fir In tl'M Cllv llMI t1'1t tll•!t al JENNIE VINCENZA of lrvlnt TEOESCO, detMs.,, Ml 1equlrld bV JI pUblic: meeting upon tilt ciunt1on of OC*"•llon of 11w OI' otherwl11, ol~tr IFllrl m•kl"9 wcri dlclk1ll1111 "'111 be l'ltld" ll'lf OI' ln lddlllon to, lhll of wld dte••sed. •I El fOfa M1rln1 SchOOI Mul!lourPOM Thi time ol ,.,., dtllh. In •ncl la t!I thll Room, trvln., C•tJIOl'nlt, on ""' 11111 dlY (ffl•ln rttl property, 1ltue!OKI In lh• City of *itmbtr, 1m, 11 tM flour of 7:30 ol Allllhei!l"I, Countv o1 O••noe, $lilt o1 o'clotk (p "1 ) C•lllorn!1, dtKr!Oed ., loll-s: aO...ii.O OF EDUCATION "Loi 2 o! Trtt! 30~. 11 ~ MIO IRVtNE UNIFIED recorded Ill IOOk '2, Pq .. 11 ~ It of SCHOOL OISTR !CT M•os ,_dtd In °''"if Coun•v." 9¥ A s11ntw COf'IT 5\lbltcl la: tvl''""' 11.-n, C'O'fflllnll. secrwi1ry of !ht tondttlon. reetrvtllon. rlvM of WIY. SO.rd of Edvc1tlon ••llffMnl .. ' '"" ·~IS!lng tneurnbr-•ni: .. ol J'ubll11Md Or•~ Co.11 01lt'( Pltol, ''l::·,.,,.,; tnd concfJtlon• of NI• ,,..: A..,..m 2', 1t1J 2629·73 PUBUC NOTICE C•"11 In ltwt\11 lnOl'llV of the United St1ln of Amerlct "' other t1111trec:t '""""' Ten Oll'Cl!ll .. !ht ln'IOIH11 tlld to KComotl'I'/' J'lle offer tllCI llMI bllanct to tit pe.ld onl---====-==c---· conllrmt110l'I of 1111 tlY ,,,. C-1. Tllltff ,ICTITIOUS IUSINESS •r-d onmluml on ln1ur•nc1 ICCtopll~lt lo NAM• ITATIMl!NT Al(ClllMr "11111. bt r.:ld by bUYll' •1 o/ !M TF!e laltowln'g ptrlOn b dQl119 buslntU cltft of conllrnwol on of 1111. Tiie ••· ts: 11mlnetl0fl of tlllt. re<:ordlrlg of con-LITTLE KORNER o~ HAWAII , "" VIVll'IA Incl _,,V Ill!• ln1111"•flC• •poll(y Fllrvltw ltd., Cosll Melt, C•lll. '26U 1ri .. t ~ 11 tlM t•f""$e ot llM pun;l\fttr. Liiiie Kar11e1 of H1w11!1, I~ .. AH bldl •nd otf~• mu1t bf In wr1tlng a C•llfor!\11 CorPOrtllon Ind WllJ bt rec:tlvld ,, the ofll(I of TM• bullMll ,, conducte.t by • COl'PGf· ROIERT R. WYATT, I0713 lot At1m!los •!Ion. LJllla KOl'r>tr ot Hew•ll l'llvd .. LOI Allll"lllQf., C1UIOl'n!1, tllwntY M k IC IF!lf• for Mid t111rnlnl1lr1lor1 11 •ny tlrnt •ft.r ,. f( ldt"~r 1111 ffnt 1111bllc1tron ol' 11111 llOIJc. 1ncs rei tloffor• '"" ll"ltklnt of Mid ..... Tiii• lt•ltment W•I filed wttri tl\t Coun- For further lnfOl'll"llllM •nd bid ~ tv Clerk ol Or•"-911 CO\lnlv on A119u11 " IPO'IY 11 !ht ofll« of 11ld lltorllf'f lor lftt lt13, 1'17Ut ldrnlnt1tr1tOl'1. I l'ublllhld Or1noe Coltt 01lly Pllol •• ri:d~Qllt II r"'1'Yld to rtlte ll'IY Ind AVillll t. lJ, n, 29, 1973 2.01.n O•ltd: Aua\lfl 23, Im SfAlblfl Don1td Tedesco Adll"llnl11,11or S/LfOlltrd Tedesco Adml"l'l•tf<lr ltOSlll:T It, WYATT, tttor'llW fW 1119 """"'"'"'"'''" ' 11m Let .1.11m1tot t 1Y11., LM Allmltot. C•ll,..,.., ,.ubll•llld Or•!IOt Cont O.!lv ,not. Aug. "· ao n s..,,, s, 1m nt1.n PUB UC NOTICE limes lo state mental hospitals, but was released as a result of an "eci>nomy move " by the Reagan ad· ministration. Asked lo comment on the Springer letter in his news conference Tuesday, Reagan said Mullin's release from state hospital was • · a psychiatric error." not an ad· ministrative error. e lnsanit11 Bid TORRANCE (API -An in- nocent plea by reason or in· sanity has been made by William Ray Bonner, 25, ac· cused of the Easter Sunday shootings that left seven dead, including his fiance and a personal friend. Superior Court J u d g .e Bernard Lawler ordered a 1 ,psychiatric -examinatioJl'.·Tl.Je,s. day and set Nov. 11 for trial. e Guilty Pleas SAN DIEGO (AP) -A federal judge has Set sen- tencing Oct. 1 for two former Small Business Administration officials who pleaded guilty to trying to arrange kickbacks on $700,CMX> in SBA loans. William Pellow, a former SBA attorney in San Diego, and Robert L. Mallette, an ex- Ion officer. entered their pleas Tuesday before U.S. District Court Judge Leland C . Nielsen. e Bill Bocke1f SACRAMENTO (AP) -A key Senate committee has ap. proved a consumer protection program, but not until com· mittee members whacked its original $2,5 m i 11 i o n ap- propriation down to $ 1 . 8 million. Assembly Speaker B ob Moretti (D-Van Nuys), told the Senate Judiciary Com- mittee Tuesday prosecutors are too busy with their "heavy criminal load -crimes of violence" to adfquately handle consumer cases. To aid consumer fraud pros. ecutlons, Moretti's bill would create a califomia Consumer Action Network. e Sign Curbs SAN DIEGO (AP) -A con· troversial sign ordinance con~ trolling billboards and other off-premises business signs in unincorporated areas has been adopted by county supervisors after a two-year batUe. The ordinance, was adopted 4-0 Tuesday. Jim sample, vice president of commlmity relations for Pacific Outdoor Advertlslng Co.. told the board that the ordinance would f o r c e removal of 116 of 199 signs in the county owned by his com- pany and by Foster-Kaiser. More Evils Of Dri1ik BUl!:NOS AIRES (AP) -EmbOldened by drink a-nd the urgi:Qgs of friends, Ramon Ellzon.'!O, 38, reached lhrough the bars of a circus cage to pet a tiger. The alarmed beast sprang around end sank his t .. th Into Ell>.ondo's right arm. Surgeons had to remove the arm. SECOND GENERATION -The Mustang II is 19 inches shorter than the 1973 1nodel and seven inches shorter than the original Mustang introduced in 1964. Standard equipment on 111ustang II includes front manual disc brakes, four- speed manual transmi ssion, bucket seats, cut·pile carpeting and a 2.3·liter four ('y!inder engine. Ford Pushes 'Small' Fir1n Sees Big Yea r A li ea<l for Little Cur By CARL CARSTENSEN Of 011 Dally Piiot Sl•ll CORONADO -Mustang II, Ford 's nev; small luxury car. shou.ld JXIWer Ford Division to a sales record in the 1974 n1odel yc:ar. Bennett E . Bidwell , Ford \'ice president and division general manager, said here_ Tuesday, Ford Division will sell 2.2 million cars and one. million trucks in the 1973. model year and wilt better \hose marks in the coming year, Bidwell predicted. IN INTRODUCING the new models, Bidwell forecast that his dealers would sell one million s1nall cars "which is more than anyone else has ever sold in the past or will sell in 1974." The retail price for Mustang FINANCE II will be under $3 ,000, Bidwell said. "Mustang II is another tirst for Ford, a forerunner of a * -{:{ Statidard Gear? Radials to_Make 'Debut' in 197 4 DETROIT (AP) -. Steel- belted, radial-ply tires will make their first large- scale appearance on the new American car lines this year. Long dominant on European highways, the radials were vi rtually unknown to the average U.S. car buyer until just a few years ago. But a major effort by the top domestic auto and tire firms has made their widespread in· clusi on possible oo 197i model cars. The radials have been wide· ly touted as long-wearing. virtually puncture-proof and capable of providing a much smoother ride. AN D THE federal Environmental Protection Agency says they also will mean a gasoline savings of about 10 percent. The automakers are ex- pec1ing Americans to jump at radial options and at models v.·ith radiaJ tires as standard equipment when the 1974 cars go on sale next month. Ford Motor Co. predicted Monday that almost half of Detroit's estimated 1974 model production run of 12 million cars \viU roll off the assembly lines equipped with steel- belted ra,dials. Harold MacDonald, Ford's vice president for product development, said the five major U.S tire firms will pro- duce about 22 million radlal tires for the 1974 model run- five percent -compared with only four million over the past year. HE SAID Ford, the nation's second largest automaker, ex- pects two or every three cars it sells to include radial tires. They will be standard on 37 of Ford 's 68 domestic models, in· eluding the largest and most expensive ones, and will be op- tional on all other models. Only 25 percent of the firm's 1973 .models rolled off the assembly lines with radials, MacDonald said. Genera] Motors says it will offer the steel-belted radials "in significant quantities" in 1974. GM introduced radials on some 1973 models. Chrysler is offerin g radial as optional equipment on all models in 1974. During the 1973 model run, they were sold only on some models. Afnerican Motors ·says it ptans to continue s e 11 i n g rad ials as optional equipment this year. PRICES FOR the radial op- tion have been in the $90 range for five tires in the past, but some increases are possible this year. Purchased separately, ra· dials are s~lling_ fpr SSQ and up each. However, the makers say the radials will not perform well on older cars tbat have not had their suspension systems adjusted properly. okay." Drive-in Eatery Profiting Despite Jargon and Costs ATLANTA, Ga. (AP ) -The man who calls himself "the granddnddy or the rast·(ood business" says busine.~s is bet· ter than ever despite rising prices and the specter of food shortages. "I run this place . like Paderewski plays the piano." grinned Frank C o r d y , millionaire owner or The Varsity. a 2lit·acre Jandnlark near the (;eorgia Tech canl· pus. Gordy calls it the 1v o r I d • s largest drive-in restaurant. LAUNC!fED TH£ year after the 1920s stock market crash on an Investment of $1,860, The Varsity sells 22.000 ham· burgerr ori a good day and - Gordy nol\ld with lyplcal hyperbole ~ "m«e French· fried onJoo rings \ban any tbioo ,nts In the caun- try.'' An estimated 2 O , O O O customers step up to the restaurant's 1wo 15 0 ~fool chrome sandwich counters or drive through the double-deck curb-service.lot each day. Prices. pegged for decades on the slogan ''A full meal for 35 cents/' have risen 15 per· cent this year. Gordy satd he does not plan to raise them again when the beef price freeze ends Sept. 12 unless absolutely necessary. f\-1eanwhilc, he's not worried. He said he-has had no trouble geulng supplies or beef or other staples -all or whi ch he . buys ·bY the ton -and anllcipatcs oont. "T lost $300 a day for a n1onth. on ontons a little while ~ck, '1 he aid, ''but J wasn't about to raise price.,, My customers wouldn't stand for -,, Wtdnt1day, .August 29, 1973 DAIL V PILOT 2J lffltlost Aetwe MUTUAL ~UNDS z~ DAILY PILDl SC Another Gas Hike Delay? WASHINGTON (AP) -The Cost of Living C.Ouncn ln- dicat«t Wednesday t h e r e could be additional dtlay tn the start of Phase 4 regula- tl<>ns for retail sales · o( gasoline. They are scheduled to go into effect Saturday. William N. Walker, the council's general counsel, said a third extension of the price freeze on gasoline h1 among actions being considered as the result of a court ruling t.hat has the erfect of ex· empting most gasoline sta· lions from the new rules. mE PHASE 4 regu1ations provide for a system of rigid price ceilings on gasoline sales and require Posting of the maximum permissible price on each gasoline pump. Kitag of the Edsel The council has appealed a U.S. District Court decision that said these regulations are arbitrary and capricious. A father and son team, John and Richard Weyrick, owns more Edsels than any· one else in the world-74. Richard, seated on one of his cars he says is worth $300, began collecting them in 1961 at the age of 13. "We believe the decision is erroneous and will be disrup- tive to the economic stabiJiza. tion program If it is allowed to stand," Walker said. Solon Hit s Bread Cost Ch1~ysler's Off er EARLIER, A spokesman said the council may decide within a week whether to grant Phase 4 increases sought by the nation's "Big Four" automakers. SAN FRANCISCO Sen. Alan Cranston ( D- Cali[.) has complained here about price increases of sourdough bread. Slo,vs Optimism The spokesman said the council would rule shortly because of the considerable publicity surrounding Uie re+ quests and because a public hearing was held Tuesday. Cranston addre ss ed newsmen Tuesday in a local bakery and blamed Secretary Earl Butz for a rise in the price of a pound of sourdough bread from SO to 59 cents. · "The price or bread is a stunning example or the bust that Butz has made of food policy" he said. DETROIT (AP) -Un!led Auto Workers bargainers, re- jecting a Chrysler Corp. con- tract offer as a "mockery," resumea efforts Wednesday to win an acceptable pact from the automaker. "We're not clear about what happens next," UAW Presi· dent Leonard Woodcock said Tuesday .after uni on bargainers unanimously re· Soap Firm Wit1ulraws Bankruptcy Bid to Stem GroWth SAN JOSE (AP) -Bestline Products, a soap and cleaning products marketing f i rm claiming $100 million in annual sales, has withdrawn Hs peti- tion for reorganization under Chapter 11 of the federal Bankruptcy Act. 'Foreigners' Score One, Locals None 'l]le company's motion to dismiss its bankruptcy petition was granted here b y bankruptcy referee Warren C. J\1oore. The petition t o reorganize was filed July 22 . The company ftled for reorganization after a civil penalty of $1.85 mi llion was ordered against Bestline in June in an attorney general's suit charging violation of California Jaws a g a i n s t pyramid recruiting ol. distributors. The company filed for reorganization in January, 1971, and in May, 1972. The petitions were withdrawn each time. SACRAMENTO (AP) -An effort to stem the spectacular success of foreign banks in California -primarily from Japan and Canada - has been defeatl'd in the Legislature. The issue of foreign banking competition has becorne a na· tional one and will have to be settll'd at the federal level, John J. Balles, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, told a state Senate committee Tu esday. HE AND OTHER witnesses said that proposed s t a t e legislation threatened to in· fringe on national foreign policy. The bill to res trict expansion of foreign banking in the state then was killed on a Z.6 vote of PRIVATE TRUST FlllDS AVAILABLE FOR "EAL EITATE LOAMI 1-1 a 2lld TRUST OEED8 $1,500 To $2ti0,DOO ~ TO 80% LOANS OH TRUST DEED COLLATERAL MEWPOIT EQUITY fUNDS NtWp011 Ceni.r uo Newport C.n1•r on .. NCIWpOl't hacll. C1llf. (11'1 ~ NATIONAL SILVER SALES An nounc:e th1 optnin9 of tt.•ir Ntwport B1eeh olfice1 in tht Centin1l1 llenk-Building, Suite 401 , '' 1lc.lu1ive Or1n91 County rtpt11fnl1ti~•1 for N11;on1I Mint Inc., produc1r1 end r1finer1 of .,'i9 lin11itvtr b1rs lfld 1ll v1r c:o!n1. Offiee1 er1 op1n tleil'( from 1 .AM lo 7 PM inti er1 1teffed with tl~tienetd 1ec:ount •••tutiv11 to di1c:1u1 lnd ividu1I r1quir1· mt11h on cl1ily prit• quot1tion1 of "SILVER ," fht fn¥tllm1nt of G.ROWTH i nd SECURITY. Phont 11nd m•il inqu1rl11 ~1• lnvittd •"d will rltt i'l'I prompt, p111on•I ~H1nlion. l"LEASE CLIP • MAIL T01 NATIONAL SILVER SALES Centintla Ba nk Building 3333 Coalf Hifhway, Suitt 401 Nowport Boach, Ca. 91660 (714) 645-4450 Pl1t11 11nd m1 llt1r1tu r1 on ''SllYER," tht ln.,11tm1n1 or Gr-th I S1c-urity • , , •• , , ••••••••••••••••••• , ••• , • O ''•••• phon1 "'' -Ho11r1 1---1 ••. , ••• , •• , ••• 0 N1rne --······-···-··-·····-········-·-·-···-·· Address ·····-·--·----·---··-················ City It Slolo ____ ,, ____ Zip -................. .. Phont: Re,, ---·-····--···-Bus. ···-··· the Senate Insurance and Financial Institutions Com· mittee. It had passed the Assembly. Entry of foreign firms into retail banking in California had triggered a battle by many o( California's smaller, independent banks which were feeling the competition. THE FOREIGN banks, ex- empt from federal banking regulations, often are able to otter lower interest loans and free services when their California competitors can't, said Assemblyman L e o n Ralph (0.Los Angeles), author of th e bill. "We allow foreign banks to do that which seems a Jillie contrary to our laws," he said during the 9()..ntinute hearing. • His bill .proposed a ban on new foreign banks i n Ca1ifornia unless California banks had reciprocal privileges to do business in their countries. It also would have prevented establishment of new banks in Cali(ornia by foreign industrial combines. In the Unlted States, banks are allowed to engage in banking business only. Kaiser Sets Air Plan In Fontana Special to the Daily Pilot FONTANA -Kaiser Steel C.Orp. officials have announced a $6 million program for the design and construction of new air pollution control facilities at the Fontana plant. The new installatk>ns will bring various mill operations into compliance with future emission regulations which will go lnlO effect In 1!175. These new regulations wert adopled by the San Bernardino C.unly Board of Supervlaors in 1972. • Ae<onling IO John D . Saussaman, Kalser Steel vice president and fbairmtn of the company's environmental commltlee: "The program Is the culmination of many months of discussions with our our oounly alr p0llut1on con- lrol dlslrlct. "K.olser SU.I bas already Inv-well over ISO mlillon In envlronmenlsl quality con- trol laclllUes and this program ls • conllnuation of our efforts lo teep our Fontana plant Cltfl\." Food Price Relief Not -I Complete New York Stock List ' ' " " • ., .. ' ' . l ' I 1 .. • . . ' ' ' ' .. .. . ' .. ' .. .. , ... • • I ; " ' ' ' • .. • -Wednesday's Closing Pri~mplete New York Stock Exchange List Stocks Continue :week's Rebound SC JO DAILY PILOT i:J American Mose Aedve Finance Briefs • • 0 SUtier ProfJe LOS ANGELES (AP) ....: ' C<ilifornlf Corpora tions Com~ 4 mlssiorief Brian Van Cainp, has received court permission ' to investigate operations of a silver brokerage finn but has failed in his bid to obtain the · company'' recorcb a n d ledgers. superior Court J u d g. campben M. Lucas ruled Tuesday that Secure Monetary Systems Ltd. of Los Angeles had failed lo prove It has the right to interfere wllh Van Camp's Investigative power. O Whittaker LOS ANGELES (AP) Wh1t1akcr Cori>. has reported a loss of $4.t4 million for Iha three months ended July II, compared wilh a prolll '4 13.37 million, or II cenlS • share, a Ye3f earlier. The <0mpall)' said TueadaJ lcoses from operalloas di.po. ed of and to be dbpooed '4 alter lox and ~· n. traordi nary ilemt OlllOllllled II '6.1 million. ... ., .. • .. , , ' %4 OAIL Y PILO f • Wtdllf'Sday, August 29, 1973 TONIGHT'S TV IDGHLIGHTS • CBS 0 8:00 -Sonny and Cher. The Third An· nual Bono Awards -a music and comedy spoof t of awards ceremonies -are presented. Guests in- clude Jean Stapleton, Chad Everett, William Con- rad and Lyle Waggoner. ABC O 8:30 -"A Great American Tragedy." A veteran aerospace engineer, thrust into confu· sion after losi ng his job, faces an uncertain future. George Kennedy, Vera Miles, William Windom . KCET El!l 10:00 -Rich at the Top. Drummer Buddy Rich and his band perform a variety or mus· ical styles from jazz classics to Beatles tunes. Taped !jlive at Rochester, N.Y. f!!!!p ..t:OWf4 ... wv.,._""""·"r.:n•••1.,,,..,,., ~ TV DAILY LOG Wednesday Evening AUGUST 29 ''°" o a D ·!ll m llll m .... rn ~ ""''· IJ BoMnza 00 C.urtslllp of Eddie's ffttllf 0 Wulld Dead or Alive m The f1intstolltS @)Star Trtll fE Ln Tortn Elll ""-" ""' m n r11 St.tore• •.JO (_6) ....... lftrMI fJ Morlr. (t) (9Gt "Ciulllwt's l"'* ..,_., tM Moon" (cartoon) '66. (I) CIS ...... W11ter Crontitt 0 ""' ca WllfTrml ~Mm Grttrtn 5'ow m""•"'"• eD Sut Tana Yl111 YM m ™"' &sr (3 ""'" (E) Oestrt T11tatr1 lfl Llttto"""" 7'°11fJ tIJ Oll!- O '°"""' tor Dtlllr• (I) ..,., (211~ '""" '"'" llo111111 (dr1) '40-John Wl)'llt, Ian Hunter. IJJ ....... """ 0 Whft MJ LIM? mt..,,...., IE I Dru•·o1 .1t .. n1t &'I Sl•pltritit. M11il ED WMeh, Xiln1 111C1 a.,. @l)MUMCI al) Aftd9nldOI de ,, C:..•ldail I!)-"'"' 7:30 IJ Wldy WolW ef Jeutk1n Wit- ters Btrblra Ftldon auests, fJ) Hogan's lttrMS 0 Wiit Tiii To11r flhr Cits Ho1111 "Be.ch Vtulion" (R) The 8o)ole f1mil(s .VICl!lolt is disrupted whtn ff•tfJ' fl'llkls 1 cltiztn's annt of SOmt nude teen1p bathers. e 11o~ ""-"" izes ht must ketp his fam!IJ to- 1etller to ftca th• uncerttinties ol a;)Dr1m1 Ille future. m Merv Griffin Sllow m Japanese Llnrutae Pn1111rn !:00 i.J Cl) Dt11 Auant An unseen ts· u i!1nt critically wounds an elderly priest, apparently ovt of fear that his conleuion will be reve1led. 00 11111 far Your Ute l!l Dnl'l'I EEi Papa Cotu111 erJ FOlllMll Patdlworl Fo!binaer Cynthia Good ln1 lllustr1tes 1!mtnts of the folksona: In tht ltst of 1 tllr1t-p1rt series. ,,,.o_ m 1ct Srn•rt EID Min luiW., M111 Destnys·"flow Genlly" The story of pollution of in-I land w1tt1'1a)'I and wilt! ctn, and is. btina done 1bcHJt it. Cit M11thacllt ttall1111 m El C.ft de h rtlvo m JtptMle lanau111 Prow•• I IO:DO IJ Cf) Cannon {R) BrDldWIJ IC· trim ROS1m1ry Murplly plays 1 su· pervisin1 nurse who is 1 ke1 liaure in a llospilll drug.theft case, in whicll Cannon is i11YOlvecl. B ®1 m SEARCH "Th• Mattson Papers" (R) Probt 11ent Bianco trills 1 missing sports fi1u11 who ft1rs for his life. em m-oo TwltlPt Zone fJ @ al Own M11'1111H "Seed of Doubr' (R) M•rshall defends his niece 1a:used of adultery by ·her husband 0.C.use flat ICNI WIS con- ceived 'llf 1rtifiC!il'.'-ernlnaffoli. 0_,!C)(2"J"lliwtrs-.- {sus) '63-Btlind• Lee, Ivan Des- 11e1. fE TllS P1titM:1 EI!l I IJIC1ij ! Rltll at tht TCJ Ta ped live 11 Rochester, New York's. '1op: of the Plaz1," drummtr BuddJ Rich and his. band perform 1 pot- pourri of music1I s!Jles from jau d•ss!es to Be:1tles' tulles. (j) Toa AIUd t.r It 0 """' I _, (CJ (2'1) l•JO UT•• .... "'ffld: of the c.r (wn) '54-Ro!). f1l Ont Sttp BeJond ert Mitchum, Tab Hunter. ID Ttllt Adventure 11j Wild Xi..._ ~ V'rdu t~ Conllictl m Thlt Clrl a> Entl'I Am taos m Dn191t EE Nm /Sports m ~tfl'Dllt "Yicklry wm Be My 11:00 f) B EJ mm m .... Mo1n (R) @@@jf!)Nrn ~ Touna. Dr. Xlld1re IJ Ont Sttp kJoni 6J Tllli Addlms F11111ty @ Pany Muon 1:00 D {[)Sonny lft4 Clter Jean step It· m Truth Of CoflllqWllCIS I ton. Chtd Evetttt and Wlmtm Con· «!) Mowle: "lldy in I blll" (com) rad ire amoni the rtciplents of '42-ll'lne OunM, Ralph 8e1larrtJ. ''The Third Ann.ual Borio Teltvision ll:l5 @El Cl nt11ta 34 I •wards," 1 lllUSIC and comedy spoof of 1w1rds cetemonies, efllCffCI by 11:30 8 (j) CBS Lill Morie: (C) "nit Lylt Waggoner. Cnlel Su .. (dr1) '53-Jlclt Hawk· 0 @l m Adm -I! "A111tomy of I Ins, Donald Sinden. 4lf' (R~ Officers Malloy and Reed 0 ®) m Joti111r C1t111 Joey 1eceive several ulls 1bovl 1 family' Blst109 b ,rues! host. disturb~nce. a Mowil: "Two Ciun1 ..... lldp" l1 Movlt: (C) (Ztlr) "YOJQI Int. (was) '54--Wayne Morris. J ~ (sci·li) '70-Akjo Ito. fJ (}) W•r ind l'elct P•rt 111 of O CIJ Q) Love Thr N1l11t bor IV parts. Th• Russian version of ·11te Two and Hit to Riihf' R•· TolstO)'•s meste(Jliece 11111 follows ~uperatinJ from injuries receiud tht flte ol Russia from 1805·181 2. in • softball game, Ch1rlie thinks m Tt Till the Tru~ Ferguson is Jeplaclng him 11 wof\ j with t black man. IZ:OO @ Mlnhlt DHlan m Trvth or Conlqlltl!Ca D MM : "LoAipop CMr" (d1a) m fht Untouehlltln '65-0on Gotdon, lee 0Plllllips. I la Senor1 J0vtn GI Mrttl Hltcllcoct Prtltflb _ W11ar1 tht Bit Idea? lZ·30 m Mltte· "Co llldo" ( d ) ,., &I) Clitmp!ouldp WrtltffnJ ' • lltl . I Y ""' El) TM AddllH ftmity -Stewlrt G11n1er, Ooritn Grey. "'°a ®J rn •sc w""""" .,...,, uo ma o rn --aanactk "The Gre1test Collection 0 Hlpny Patrol ol Them AU" (R) Banacek Is called 1:30 O O ""'* in to invest111te when $23 million worth of palntinp ire stolen en 1oute from New York to Boston. fJ @ CD ABC Wednesd1y Mowit: (C} (90) "A Grut Amtrican Tr11· flt(' (dn) ·11-Geo1ge KennedJ, Vera Miies, William Windom. A vtl· er1n atrospaee anginetr. thrust Into o::inluslon tfter losing Ms Job, rul· 1:45 IJ 'M0vft: (C) "Tiit Slull" (Kl·fi) '65-Peter Cushing, Christoplltr Lee. 2:30 m AH·Nl(lrt Show: "Da-.el'0111t 111· tnMftr," "Sliva ti Ute hMslble Mon1tlr" ( 3:101J Movie: "A Utttr Story" (com) 047-B•rbara Hale, 8111 Williams, ' Th d 1:00 m "fatlltr It I l.cti.llr" (cam) UrS ay 'SO-Wi!li1111 H<ttden. Coleen Gr11. 1:30 0 "Otallp" (dr1) '57-Jttt Ch111d- DAYTIME MOVtES i.r, Joanne Dru. 9:30 O (CJ """""" (drt) '54-Clarl J:OO (]J (C) "Ptnlt If h uW (mm) Gable, lint Turntr. Victor Mitur• '41-ietlJ Hutton. John Lund. • ®t· ...... -... _.p,~ IO:DO (}) ...,.. Pak... (WIS) '57 -I (dfl) '63 -Jack L•mllMMI. Ltt G&orp Montrotntl)', John C.rrldltle. Remlti. U "TH Uttte s...,.. (dn) •19-l :IOO .,., ... W1tll CIN" (d~) - Pedro Atmendtriz. 0.1n Jona. Join O'Bnan. lZ:OO e '"fltltltll " ... l•UI" (WU) ':Oii e (C) "Crkk11p" (myi) ·•~at '52-0t!t Robtrtso~. ''111 DIM!r O'Brien, Claire frtvor. ""'" <""" '44-Uord er•,.. '''°!lls. .... 10AM ltttla1 KOCE, CHAN NEL 50 .. • After Many Turnd OWtas 'Graffiti' Boosts Director's Image By BOB moMAS would let me make the pi cture film maker emerging from the learn all the basic skills such LOS ANGELES (AP ) ,._ "At if I rewrote the script. [ aatlon's unl versities. as how to run a camera and least I can get in the front finally got Universal to ag ree how to record sound. One of ,114NG THI DRUM d00;r of studios now . They no to back me _ but only A NATIVE or Modesto, he the best things is that you get SLOWLY'' CPGI longer say, ·George Lucas. Oh because I got' my friend, Fran-hap p e n·e d t o meet to see thousands of movies, "LAD: ICE" yes, he's the guy who made cis Ford Coppola. to serve as · past and pre••nt." Ii~~~~~~~~~~~ th t t I I. t' c1nematographer H ask e 11 ..... a s range sc ence-1c ion producer. We' made the deal movie. Well, I wouldn't let the week that 'The Godfather' Wexler, who encouraged him LUCAS WAS a prolific film him get close to actors.' '' came out. and they were im-to enroll in the film school at maker at USC, One of his short Th is_ .Is director George pressed with Francis." the University of Southern films was a science fiction Lucas' ironic view of the Cslifomia. He was a member subject "THX 1138." When he change in his fortunes. A year With Coppola as overseer, ot the class of 1966. which has later became assistant to Cop- ago. he CQuldn 't get studio Lucas filmed 1 ' A.mer i ca n produced John Milius ( .. Dill-pola, Lucas expanded the film bosses to return his telephone Gra(fiti" in Petaluma and San inger") and other new film and made a feature for calls. Today they're calling Rafael, Calif., in 28 days. Or makers. Warner Brothers. "It made him. rather, 28 ni ghts, because the mo.ney in the theaters. but not \Vhat made the difference? ENTERTAINMENT entire action takes place dur-"The university experience in the accounting office," said ''American Graffiti.'' ing a single night and early was very valuable lo me the director. fl is admittedly Lucas' morning. because I knew nothing about I hr mo.vies," said Lucas. "It is a twas t ee years before he salute to the end of his in· "I budgeted the picture at great environmnet in which to was able to get "Arnerican nocencc, a hauntingly ac· $800,000, but Universal insisted learn; you're all friends en-Graffiti " before the cameras. et,irat~ portr~it of. a teen-age George Lucas wears his that I make it for $600,000." couraging one another. It is Now he's finding it easier to night 10 a mid-California town new-found praise well . He has Lucas said. "It ended up at peddle his next feature, "a f 1962 To h . almos t a Renaissance at-o . t e background of iust turned 29 and might loo.k $700,000, plus about $50,000." space fantasy \1:ith capes and 42 songs of the period, the like a teenager except for the Geo.rge Lucas is a shining m~S'pA herhe. 1 ray guns -a $6 million idea young people do. their thing at trimmed brown beard he sc 00 can't teach yolf which I'll make for $3 the high school prom, on the wears. His view of the filml-~ex:a~m;p~le=-o_f _t_he:n~ew;;,b~r:ee~d;-;;o:I :-w:ha~t~to::s:h:oot::, ~b:u~t ~y~o~u-::c•:n:lr~m~i~ll~io~n~.'ii. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii main street, in the drive-in world is mature, and that's and lover's lane. understandable. He has been U.A. CITY ANO SOUTH COAST CIHEMAS-TUESOAY SO< "EAS{LY TliE bes t movie through the mill. so far this year," wrote "I took 'American Graffiti' Stephen Farber in the New to every niajor and minor York Times. "One of the most company in liollywood," said i-npo1·t~nt American fil ms of the director, "and every one the yea r," said Ch a r I es of them turned it down. They Champlin in the Los Angeles told me that it was 'a musical Times. Paul D. Zimmerman in montage' or 'not interesting Newsweek called it a enough' or ·not enough story.' "brilliant, bitter s \.•:e et me~oir" \Vith ''tension and "AMERICAN International to.ug~~~:·~~d~:iii,~iimiii~jjjleii;ity Riii."iiEiGliUiiiPiiii~iiit:: ;:11_1~~~-id_th_ey CINEMALANO & SDUTHCOAST #2 WEEK DAYS 7 & 9: 15 SIT-SUN·MOI 2'15-HS·MO & 9,15 NO RESERVED SEATS ORlltGE #I ,.... starts losk AlSO -"LEGt:ND Of FRENCHIE KING" MAnHllS TOOAYll "HEAVY TRAFFIC" IXI "WHAT DO YOU SAY TO A NAKED LADY?" "S0!1ND O'.; f.~U SIC" NO RESERVED SEATS With .!:.ilie A11dre- ..... "SCORPIO" .. LIVE t.ND LET DIE" ... "THE ,1EC:-tf1 NIC" f PGI "i'APl!R t.l!'."t)N" lf'GI ... "HAROl.D & IAA UD!" "FUNN ';' Gl r.l" '"' "Clwl aid t'ie ~auyccit" { ?G) llAOIE_! AHO GOLDEN AGERS}-()PEN TIL. 2:00 P.M. From IM• Mak1r5 of Frill Ille Cal • "HEAVY TRAFFIC" "PUTNEY SWOPE" "' e oltl In Colort li~-CHl51(~1Xll G~ •~Ji lllWY lll•lll EliralMlll Taylor P,1111 Ntwm111 "NIGHT WATCH'' • "THE MACI NTOSH MAN" "LADY ICE" "THE CAHOIOATE" BGlll 111 C1loft (PG) Botti In C1lorl (PGI Tom Ll ll'Jhlin Burt lttynoolch "WHITE LIGHTNING" ON STAGE IN PERS.ON . " ,_ - WILLIE DAVIS CAPTAIN OF THE L.A. DODGERS WILLIE'S BASEBALL CLINIC ASK QUESTIONS ANO HAYE A GREAT TIME~EVERYDNE WILL RECEIVE A WILLIE DAVIS BOOKLET-HOW TO BAT in both theatres this FRIDAY AUG. 31st AT 12:15 ONF SHOWING ONLY AT EACH THEATRE ALL SEATS ONLY 75 ' IIilill ·"'°~ ...... ~ ..... , ...... \! .. ,. ,,~ 11 " Start Weekend Early Th~ weekend begins aJoog the Orange Coast on Friday. Thot's the day lhe DAJLY PU,QT publishes !Is WEEKENDER, a lively section about the li vely arts - and where to dine out and other in teresting thin3s that can make a weekend a m1nJ vacation for you and the special people In your Ule. Start your weekend early nexl Friday. Start It with the WEEKENDER. LID 0 NIWPOOT BEACH lHTIANCr TO l.100 1\lf ~ ,, lllSO NOW! FIRST RUN! Abrolo<lltl"""ll:W>n DONALD SUTDEIUAND JENIVIFER O'NEILL 'LADYIO:' o llD flml mPmml fllillBI !PGI 1-rs.;ra.s1m Gjl -AND - EYes: Frcm 1 p.m. Sun.: Co11tbu10111 fro~ 2 p.m. ALL fHIAn lS COOtfO I T lffllGll ATK>H WK DAYI 7 & 9t1S SAT-SUN-MON 2:15-4iSS 7 ..... '115 (X) T~ ~ltL -IEGUtAI PllCES S oulh Coast Plaza I 1,<o t11r.o 11n.•t..,\l!>I ua.1111 1 ttll & NEWPORT 548-11552 EXCL U S IVE I The 9reotett dMI of the KUNG FU ll'lotten "DUEL OF THE IRON FIST" .. '· -And-•, "CUT-THROATS· NINE" . ROGER MOOR! ' .... 007 In Jomes Bo11d'1 "LIVE AND LIT DIE" + "THE MECHANIC" 1~ith Cliarlts lrot11on Both l:i Color IR I ,· ·' Lincoln A"' '., wool ol 1111<11! t21.1ore (I) NO OHi ~ 11 ADMrmO ~i &HlllUllO Aoutr SHOW! 1 HEAVY TRAFFIC (.I) I HAMMER Of GOD in ! f' I • • -• • .aguaia B e ae. Tetlay's Fl.Dal N.Y. Stoeks .. EDITION VOL. 66, NO. 24 1, 7 SECTIONS, 88 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEONESOA '{, AUGUST 29; 1973 TEN CENTS • • a1n eac , . Thu111bed Down Office r Bails Out Prosp ector ' A strapping, bearded gold J1l'O'pedor from Hope, Alaska, thumbed a ride south out of Newport Beach for San Diego Tuesday to see a sISter facing a leg amputation, after a short stopover in jail. HE HIT the road with 54 cent. In ready mooey and two mining claims In his pocket after a sympathetic policeman loaned him $2 to mate up the differ· ence in an $8 fine. -Palrlck W. Jones, 24, standing six feet, three Inches tall and weighing 217 pounds, was formally arrested and booked oo a charge ol hitchhikillg In the roadway. Patrolman Bob Hardy claimed Jones was standing in traffic Janes 1n the 3900 block of West Cocut Highway, holding up a sign saying: san Diego. THE oriICER claimed several cars had to swerve around the miner. ; Officer Hardy said Jooes, who bad only '6.54 In cash, carried no formal ! tdentiflcatlon and had no obvious local ties, such as relatives· in the area, so ~be was taken to, beadquarten. · Authorities were concerned about Jones' failure to carry a driver's license, I drafl can! or other acceptable identilica~on. · 0 HE RAD two $20 traveler's checks, a bunch of papers and a couple of mining claims with tJ)e name Patrick W. Jones," said another patrolman who asked not to be ldentilled. "I've been to Alaska," be continued. 0 And the people there have a par- ticular type of personality. He seemed to be a good guy. "Don't print this," 18id the syrnpathetle officer, "but I loaned him a couple of .bucks to make bail." Laguna Residents Appeal Approval of Big Mansion lly. FUDBllfCX IOrOIMliD; .... _.., ...... • lsllDg development In the !fockledge . Two ltlldOnts o1 ~ §be" spec111oa11y o1>Jeoled to !he .,. In Lqim lieacb slld '!Moy theJ wtu &iiasid density -of a tennis seek an oppeal of appronl t:"° a · ' • ' · fllO ooo blul!top mansion by the coort. nnt to the busy South Coaat ~t Re g I o n al Cooaervatlon m-lllgbway, cona-etO pillars which will sup- mlsston. / pori the mamm and a deck that will Burt Harris and Mrs~ge Peer, projecl 19 feet over a cover from the boih members ol the . I•,~ c1ur1 edge. t_loo, . were critical of . ooday s action Harris confirmed ~· Peer's state. granting a pem)lt for the bome, re-m"'t that an appeal will be lodged. 'luested by Mr: and Mrs. Bo7d Jellrlee. South Coast commissioners discussed Attornl!ys for the association, said Mrs. the project for more tlian two hours Peer, will be notified to file the appeal Monday and granted a permit for the with the slate Coastal Cooaervalion Com-project In .. a to 2 ...ie. Cornrnlssioners dlissioD, parent of the ,teglooal body Ronald Caspers ol Newport Beach and established by Proposition 20. Rimmoa Fay ol ·Venice cast the dissen- , Mrs. Peer Rid the lt,000.square-foot ting ballola. iµansion Is not compatible ,.ith the <>; Prior to the YOte, 26 owners of home& In the Roctledge area protested the palatial borne. )t features live bedrooms, Broadsid~ /Cf ash. . :;~~.: ... ~ car garage and • . • , • Attonieys allil • C<W11Ultant for Jeflrles I L B h deleoded the project and said use ol pro-n aguna eac tective construction techniques will . maintain stability of the Rockledge T ...;_ • . 3 w bluffs. H1Jures _omen __ S.!!llllg Jones, attorney for the Rocldedtle AJaoclaUon, oplalned that an 'lllree ,.ung Laguna Belcb women a~ must be filed within 10 days of m. Injured 'nleJday evening· in a ilial, appl'O'lal. • were llislon 1 the m. Ttie atata COIJlllllalcn may refuse to sev~re . broadside CO a hear the appeal or conduct a hearJna to tenectioo of Diamond Street and South decide whether to upJtold or reject prior ~!1~"'."~orman Baboct said Lealle (See ROCKLEDGE, Paae ll $150,000 Giten City For Rec Use The Orange County Board o f Supervisors Tuesday authorized $150,000 in fedefal revenue-sharing funds for the ' . -city of Laguna Beach to develop Main Beach Park and a new ~reation f~clli~ ty. Out of the $1511,000 grant, $100,000. will go toward the Main Beac~ Park and $50,000 is earmarked for a new recrea· lion department building. 0 Wonderful," exclaimed Terry Brandt, city administratJve assistant who bas coordinated grant programs for the $1.Z million development and land acquisition program for the beach park. "I'm delighted with the decision," commented George Fowler, director of the recreation department. Supervisors awarded the money to Laguna Beach on recommendation of the Orange County Harl>ors, Beaches and Parks C.Ornmission. ' City finance director Tom Meade said MONDAY WILL BE !.:AST DAY· FOR FARM.ORIENTED, SEVEN-ACRE AMUSEMENT PARK' today $100,000 tor the lo!ail\ Beach park '· ,. • Na1tled in a Clinyori off"C,.,.n '.'•lley Po~!'-!• Area. U~10 Ba c-boy Complrovncl will be used to cover lncreaied costs due . . .. ... _ to ~ of park and inflation wbile -· 1 .. ···~.~ .. • t : • • 1 • ~ ... , • ~ .. ' -r Z~Ziit'.~ml~Uof~ tt• ·rJ.tel'.JOn·afd~;:)fJlosing · ·, grants $®1),000. int ~1ty;1!1!1ld mj>!!<l"apcl __ __._.., ~· ., • .•• '100;000 tropt ederat' re.venu~ . ·• • • • • Oll ~4=11g: ~ia aulhorise M1r1sr:qn ¥w10. A:muse.ment ~arm Not Paying ,., will be ~ 1'ttb $500,000 In f~l • • t" .f · • ., , · ' .' · ' • . money ·at their nnt meeting M-· • ... · ' · · • . . . , ' Id It' · -""M ' tee! fwKls wfil come BJ JAN· WOR1p ~" added. "We made a Jot at Knoll's Ila tall euclilyptus and" pepper trees sa • 11 ~i,uupa . -·, or .. ...,tr "'"' S"9 but . when we moved down here there were carefully, presef!ed. when the fro'!' • $271,000 account allocated for "This thing musta l'!ne around a jillion • aeemed .to be some confusion In · the animal park wu built four, years ago. pu~~ 0::t:' ~c~~:Oa~~-times," Fultm·Sha~ ,Jl.id.,witb1~ smile 81 P:Ub.li'c's .mind .~bout~ we:,Were and •·w~1te proud· that we'v~, made our ~v· t ·u te the resent 'facility in· he and bis wile Kay cllm~ on to ·the who -we were. • Ing in an honest way, Shaw SI.Id. ~en old';, ~saCiUb·bUU'g lit 115 N. Coast old-fashiMled-muJe-driven carousel for a 'Jbey said _th~y lov_e .the location, leased "We've made a lot ol ki~ happy/• . IDghway ~ifnionth ·and move to the<old photograph. from the Mission Vie JO Company. Nesti· Many of the old;lasbioned ,blnckslllllb post office ~l)ijjJdlng on GleMyre Street The park, Old McDonald's Farm In ed m a little canyon off Crown Valley equipment, . harnesses, carnages, and now leased by the city. The pre:ient MisSion Viejo, was deserted, except for Parkway, the spot 1lsed 1to be a .catnp.~r s&ddles adding an authentic flavor to tbe facility Will be dernoltshed as part of the squawking ol chickens and an OC· cowl>oys o1 the original Mission V1eio park are those which Shaw collected and Main Beach Park coosttuction. casional .pig's grunt. land oompany. (See FARM, Page Z) The IS00,000 county grant will be ·llllP' Sllioe'. last September', the l!"VeJl.aCl'e plemented with $70,000 in city revenue-f~rm-;onented ,chlldren s ai:ziusement sharing mon·ey to cover the cost of.a ltd park has been open onl>: on weekends. recreation facility. One location under Now eyeo that compromise has proved consideration for it is RiddJe Field unprofitable, and tbe Shaws, owners of Fowler said. ' the tot spot, have decided to close it He said he hopes the new facility may down . . be constructed within 3 year. Monday wtll be th«: last dar of opera· lion. TbouiJI Shaw said ,ooc1 paturedty.he and his Wife 'ore ")Ust two ,happy Antis. mog Bill OK'd failures," there's littte chance the .two will setUe for inactivity. . Shaw, a California native, has been an SACRAMENTO (AP) -FeaMg Gov. animal trainer for 3:5 years. At Old Ronald. Reagan would Y~~ a ~ · McDonald!s-Eann bis trained rabbit, prehen'1ve auto safety·ant1smog-no1se Buck Bwmy, rode a cart ~WJ'\ a hip. A control bill, the. Assembly Tran.sportati~ pig went down a slide. Chickens raog approved a stripped down antismog bill bells · Tuelday. Voting 12-0, the cornmitlee sent · the bill to the Assembly Ways and Means He figures his training talent will come Committee, last stop before it reaches in handy in television and film work. the AS9elDbly Ooor. Kay Shaw, who met Fulton when they were both. working at Knott's Berry Plnnn~rs ·Okay Density F-0r Machu Picchu Site A base density of ll2 ·unlla on ·tbe n. acre Macbu Picchu site 'betweeh Top of ~ the wor1d-and-Myst1c-mns-bn been ap: proved by the Laguna Beacb Planning Commission. plan waa conducted. Other standard$ fQL !be· _p.roJect In- clude: ' -Review of clustering, landscaping and ir.lprovemehts by the Design Review Board. Ann Spears, H. of 222 La Brea Drive was southbound on the highway and proceed- ed lntO the Intersection. He! late model sedan collided with a fmlglt ,compact car driven by Sandra Marie Fly, 24, o! 2275 S, Coast IDgbway. ~ was so ,.vere that the Fly vebl· cle-eame to real In the northbound traffic lanes ol the highway. . • Howard Hopkins Seeks Fanti, specializes in children's .activities and during Old MacDonilld's four years in MfSsion Viejo she has catered hl,lll· dreds ol birthday parties, for children on the grounds. ' Planners accepted a stall recom- mendation for · the density factor. The number of allowed single family units is roughly haU the 250_ units originally ~ quested by Creative • Communities, Inc., develOpers of the Maclin Picchu plan. The base density may ·be JOggled lo percent up or down, depending on size of the homes, traffic generated, number of · schoOI age cbtltlren, recneation .land and adyerae environrneh\al Impacts. -Preparation of working model so the commission can judge the physical and visual relationships of the project. -Dedication of open spac_e to the city or care of open space through main· tenance agreements. -An environmental impact report prepared by a city-appointed consultant paid for by the develo!l(!r. ~· Beach firemen were first on tlio iceDe and provided emergency first '!ld' treatment to both drlnn and a Jiuaenger in the Fly vehicl<, carol Ann Petel'!Oll, 24, also o1 221• s. Coast llJihway. Botll Mlsa Spears · and Miss Fly were admitted to South Coaat Community llDtlpltal and are listed In satisfactory ct'iS!ltlon toc!aY while Miss Peterson was treated and released Tuesday night. .IJit. Babcock said police Will ,..k ~ against Miss Spears for !allure to Obey a traffic signal. • J hdge Otders ' 'Fapes' Release . .--:\~ WASHINGTON (AP) -The Waterpte trlfJ judge this afternoon ordered Presl· ~ Nixon to tum over for the judge's P!I~ fnspectlon tapes aubpoenaed by tiit Watergate prosecutor, but atayed the order for nv. days to permit appeal. :'ll.S. District Court Judge John J. llR'ca aakl Jn a ruling certain to be ,a~ liOJ!led that Nixon D\Ult "produce foi'lhwttb for the court'• uamlnatkin In ~•" tbe tlpe recordings of Nixon's ..,_Uona wttb key Aides Implicated lji. !fli! Waterpte lnveotlgatloo. ' • Seat on Sanitnry ·Board· 1 Howard V. Hopkins, part owner and manager of the Treasure Island Trailer Park, Tuesday announced his candidacy for the November South Laguna Sanitary District board election. Hopkins, an IS.year resident of South Laguna, said he will campaign on a plat· form of merger of the sanitary district aod the South Coaat County Water District. "As a busineaarnan and resident In this area, I ban !mown for many years that • the South Laguna Sanitary Diltrict and the &uth Ooaat CoUnll. Water Dislrlct shlluld be merged," said Hcipkins. "lliany attempts have been made In the past but always some elCllle wu found for poetpontng the action,'' be a<f. f decf; • "By rwming for the sanitary board, I will be giving the people within the dlstrl<l! an opportunity to erpress their wishes on the subject. A vi>te for me Is a vote for the merger. 11 P.opklna noted that merger of the twn districts wu supported two years ago In an .. tenttve management stu\IY ol operaUona ol both districts. lloptlns' candidacy la 9U]Jported by Cltlltent for tbe M~er, Robert E • (See BOPltlN!I, Pqe l) .. l'ILES FOR BOARD Howard V. Hopklnt • The Shaws hope to· direct thelr'elforts to eduCJ!tional. television. • Of. IJie 'i5 •dcimestlc .anllnals ai the farm, including rabbits, exotic breeds of chickens, burrows, mules, goats,· pigs and turties, the Shaws will keep only the rab- bit.. T1ie rest will be sold, possibly to two similar 1coinpanies who sPecutllie in the same kind of enter141nment. '"Ibis is a sad decis.l.on," Mrs. Shaw said. "Even if we go into children's TV programs or commerclals, we'll miss all the little-kids we'.ve .bad· here;" 11We've never made any money here," Telephone· Firm ' ' . . . Gets Hike Okay "Final. ~ty.. fi~ .ind ·other ·design details !frill-tie --out under a specific plan: pri>cess,biYol'!lng·.a ieriea of study sessions between the p!annlng,com· , ~=:: deVeloper and -1 D t·e r Ei St e d The· resolution establi.sbing densitx was approved. ln a· 21to-l vote, with Com- missioner Boger Lanphear voting in op- position. Lanphear earlier voted against a specific plan for the project, arguing that several General,P.lair elernents need to be adopted before large scale develo~ ments are considered. Cornmlssio~ Sally .Bellerue abstained from the vote since she was not present when the original vote on the specific COUClf, CHA.JR . . ' . ' D"J!,A.W RESPONSE LOS ANGELES' (AP) -General · • , Teiephone 'today •wat grinted suthority'to SUcceso1atories are not u rare as you Increase its rates $0!0 million a year. might think. J.Qok at thts. one: The increase was approved by the california Public Utilities Commission. The phone company had sought a rate hike of it&.2 million to offset what It said were higher labor • costs resulting primarily from a series of three wage in- crea•es dating back to Julf II, 1971. · Rates to be affected m for private line service charges, move and change, pushbutton telephone' system and aervlce connection. The fee for ·unlisted numbers will go up 15 centll a month. * 6' COUCll · & matching chair .. Gold & white. Almost new. !50. (Phone No.) • This Dally Pilot odvtrtlser had 15 calls the first nlght l The Item was sold, of course, and another succe91 story was wrttlen. Our Ad·vC.Or can help you write your own succeSll story. Qial her dlrectJ. 61Uf'11. In other adon MQllday night, the com- (See DENSITY, Page Z) ·or .. ge Coast Weadaer The sun will peek through those Jow cJouds Thursday morfting leav- ing the rest of the day fairly sunny. Highs wilJ ra.ige from 'ro at the beaches to 75 inlanci OVernlgbt Jows 63-65. INSID.: T OD AY It ,,,... • gav time in N•ID York -tVe:n though. thev .lost mUtr- ably. Tlie homosuual commu· nitv ployed the pollce depart. mmt in a /riefldlv baseball a<mte to better their image. St0Tt1 ?oge 7. I. 2 DAILY PILOT LB N ixo1i Takes Free·1.vay Trip President Nixon \.\'ent for Ano1her drl\'(.' on the Cllliforn i:i rree\\'ays. ~ccom~111Cd by h1$ \.\•1fe, Pat, and daughter, Tricia Nixon Cox. Escorted •bv l\VO Sc1:re1 St•rvice curs. the> NIXons stopped 'l'ucsd ay for 4111 hour <1l Red Beach inside lhc Camp Pendleton i\.tarine base . The \Vestem \Vhite !louse did qot announce the Prcsident 's excursion until the Nixons had arrived at the beach. A news mt.'<lia car that attem pted to foll ov• then1 found its path blocked by the Secret Service. "There are certain times '\'hen the President \.\'ants to be private," ieputy press secretary Gerald L. Warren told reporters. 01te C1·i tie11r Wtdnl!'sday, A119U)l 29. 1CJ7J Tr ie Cut Short • Agnew Daughter· Life Threatened \\'ASl·II NGTON (UPI) -Vice Presi- dent Spiro T. Agnew 's daughter Susa n cut short a voyage on the hospital shi1> VSS Hope because of threats on her life n\ade in Brazil , an Agnew spokesman said today. Marsh Thomson. the vice president's press sec retary, said the family made •·a judgment ... not lo take any further rlsks" and arranged to have the 26-year- old P.1iss Agney,• ·:eturn to \Yashington . f\fiss Agne\V, who sailed aboard the !·lope in February \Yilh the intention of returni ng in Decen1ber, worked with audio-visual education equipment-. "There had been threats on her life dovrn there (Brazil) and although the Brazilians thought they could take care of the situation and the vice president has expressed confidence in the abil ity or the Bratllia.n government to provide necessary security, as a rather he ·wanted to take the prudent n1easure of bringing her closer to hon1e,'' Thomson said. Five h1jured Aboard Jet As Tail Takes Wild Jolt The \\'ashington Star-News reported to- day that Dr. William \Valsh, \Yho founded Project Hope under which the ship sails on humanitarian missions, said both he and Miss Agnew received several threats -including one last week that could not be Ignored. "This was a threat which we felt was more serious and American intelligence agreed with Brazilian intelligence," Walsh told the Siar-News. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Five women were injured, one critically with a broken neck when a Trans World Airlines Boei~g 707 was jolted as it approached Los Angeles International Airport. TWA sad the mishap Tuesday night "'as caused by mechanical failure or air turbulence. An investigation is under way. A passenge r, Ann Clemente of San Diego, said "For a minute, it felt like we · were at the Promised Land. "There .,.,·ere people behind me praying. We were flying through the air. Marine Trial Jury Excused For One Day An Orange County Superior Court jury that must eventually dete nnine the guilt or innoccace of accused El Toro ~1arine Sgt. Jared Allan Wallace got a day off from the murder trial today to allow Judge Raymond Vincent and the two lav;yers involved to prepa re jury In- structions. Judge Vincent excused the panel late Tuesday after deputy public defender Ron Butler completed his case in answer to cha rges of 1nurder, rape and kidnap. Butler and prosecutor Robert Chat- terton snid th ey will deliver final arguments to the jury Thursday after brief rebuttal testimony from further witnesses. \Vallace, 26, denied . from the witness stand that he raped and strangled cocktail \\'aitress Nanette Post , 27, of Fount ain Valley last Feb. 9. The veteran or two Vietnam tours told the jury he was "nowhere near" the Hunttngton Beach area in the hours before Mrs. Post's nude body was discovered. \Vallace told the jury that he suffered a n1emory lapse five days earlier when he allegedly kidnaped South Laguna X·ray technician C8role AM Rowan . Miss Rowan , 24. told the jury she v•as responding to an emergency call from a San Clemente hospital when Wallace ordered her to halt her car near the beach cities offramp of the San Diego Freeway. She said \Vallace. who worked as a part Hme security guard for the Mission Viej o Co mpany and Fountain Valley Pla1..a. ordered her at gunpoint to put handcuffs on her wrists. !\.tiss Ro\van said she struggled with \Vallace to the point that the Marine sergeant pull ed over to the side of the freeway and she was a,bte to leap from his car. \Vallace testified that his memory \\'ent blank from the time he \\'as questioning a woman trespasser in the Mission Viejo area to a few hours later when he realiz· ed that J\liss Rov•an y,•as riding .,.,·ith hi1n in his car OIAN•I COAST L• DAILY PILOT Tl>e Or1no. CoAil DAILY PILOT, wr111 .... !di " (Dm!)I~ "'' Nt"'I Pres .. !1 Pl.lbllllltd tlV "11 Otl"'O• (IMll Plllltl•klf'9 Compeny, 14p.1. ''" ldl!kwtl ''' llUlll'*"-d, M-•r ll'lrougli Fr;ci1v, 19r C~•• "'"'· NnP001 IMck, Hun!lng!on 9etek1Foun111" Ville~. Lt11un• B•1cti, ln1!n1IS1ddl1~ 11111 Sin Cll'nlen••I S•n J..,.n C•Pl•l••"ll. A 1tnoi. ,~iofl•• ldlHon 11 PUbllol\lld S.tvrt11y1 tnd 5'/rldlyi, fll• ~rln(ll>'!I DUllll1lllnf pl1n! II fl U0 WtU 1•1 S••,•t, Co111 Mn1, e.111or11I•, mtt R.ob1rt N. W,M l'tfticl..,t Ind ,11111/ll>ef J 1tt R.. Curl1y Viet l'tMlcl.,,1 11111 °""'" M111t1e- Tho1n11 1e,, .. u ft•lel' 'Tho1n11 A. Mur,llt"' "'•nlllllrle l!tlfor Chttf11 H. Leot R.lch•" '· NtU Aoa ll!tnl """"'"'-f:flMfl &..t•M .... Offk• 221 For11t "'''"'' Mtlli119 Atltlr11u ,,0 , 101 666, fl6$2 ........... eo.,, """'' ,. "":!.::r····" H....,....1 ltedl! *U3 H iovlf~tif Hlff!llfltlOn IM<lli 1111$ IMC!'! '°"""'''' $111 Cl•"*'••1 •s Norll'I II Ctmi.. 11 .. 1 ,.,.,.. .. (7141 642 ... J21 a..Ht.4 A"-'I .... Mf.1671 L.,..... .._. All Dop lft"'9ttl1 tMtphN •••• , ... c.o,,..,..,, ltl'J. Oftno• Co111 'l.IOl!.rtlf\I ~llf. Ht llf•I llONll, lliUlltfllfM, '°"'"'"' rMNtr fl' tdvtnlMmtni. ,,.,..In _,. llo ...,.....,., wl"-! ...... 1 "'' ""''* "' '-"'""' -· ...... tltU M119" Milli II C.11 M-, C.tlf9rl\£t, ~ .. i.. t¥ CftTltr u ... ~' .. Mlli u.u _. .. ._., mll!t.,., .. ,.......,,.. tl,.S -lllY. ' We were bounced around quite a bit." The women. including two stewardesses, were slandlng up when the plane shook, TWA said. Marge Payette of Huntington Beach, was ia critical condition with a broken neck at Centinela Valley Community Hospital. Two others were hospitalized with lesser injuries. They were identified as Ellen Hargitay, 31, of Los Angeles, with a sprained hand and a possible back In- jury, and Te-sun Hse, 16, of Taiwan, with a broken jaw and a possible fractured skull. The stewardesses were treated at the hospital and released. They were iden· tified as Ellen Chaplro, 21, of Honolulu. and Betty Gray, 30, of s;eamboat Springs, Colo. Hospital spokesman said both suffered lower back injuries. United Press International quoted one passenger saying there was a lot of "praying out loud." "People were touching the celling and coming down ," sa.id John Adams of Norton, Mass. "It was really chaos." "A couple of people fell very badly. The people who were not in their seats, they were lhe ones who got hurt." Adams said there was no warning to fasten seat belts. He added there was "no panic." The SPokesman said a military doctor traveling on Oight'742 from Hong Kong via Okinawa, Taiwan, Guam and Honolulu aided the injured before the jetliner landed. There were 132 passengers and nine crew members a~ard the flighl, scheduled to tennlnate in San Francisro. Passengers were sent to San Francisco aboard other planes. "The Brazilians felt .she was \YOnh a great deal in ransom in exchange for political p r i s on e r s and their responsibility was greater than ours," said Walsh. Miss Agnew told the Star-News that her ret urn had nothing to do with the in- vestigation of her father in coMectioo with alleged kickbacks from Maryland contractors. On that score, she was quoted as saying: " ... I don't feel any cause for concern because I know my father is an honest person." From Page I ROCKLEDGE • • approval from the regional body. The Laguna Beach ·Planning Depart- ment has given "in concept" approval to the home . A building pennit has been ap- plied for but issuanc~ has been delayed pending careful review of plans for the project. Complaints Revealed WASHINGTON (AP ) -Niimerous complaints about radio and fight in- struments · were recorded in the flight Jogs of the Delta Air Lines jet that crash- ed at Boston July 31, the Na!lonal Transportation Safety Board said today. Eighty-eight of J,he 8' persons aboard•the flight were killed when the OC·9 jet crashed into a seawall short of the rW1way at Logan International Airport. Bay Ownership Jur y Probi1ig SUp ervisor Action By JOHN ZALLER 01 1111 DlilY Piiot Sltlt The Orange County Grand Jury is con- ducting an investigation lo see if Orange County supervisors are moving fast enough toward bringing Upper Newport Bay into public ownership, it was learned today. Marcia Bents, grand jury foreman , Heat Threatens Power Supplies In East St.ates By Tbe Associated Press With !~degree temperatues threaten- ing, the New York State Power Pool put a statewide five percent voltage reduction into effect today. Other utilities on the East Coast and in the 1.Iidwest braced for another bout with severe electric power demands as the wave of hot, muggy air hung on. The cutback in New York came three hours earlier than the S percent cut Tuesday which the pool said enabled it to meet a record demand of 20,132,000 kilowatts at mldafternoon. Temperatures in the mid--90s caused massive con- sumption of electricity by air oon- dilioners and some power failure s were reported. A spokesman forecast that today's de- 1nand also would pass 20 million kilo\vatts. Au10 companies closed down llieveral !\.1idwestern plants becau~ of the heal v.·ave, while some 750 sweltering 11.·orkers at two other plants simply walk- ed off their )obs. New York City sufiered through a year·high temperature of 98 Tuesday as Consolidated Edi90ft reported a record power demand of 8,161 megawatts. The temperature·humJdlty index hit 85, which a spokesman for the National Weather Servioo said meant "utter misery." 'T'hc power pool got 906 megawatts of extra electricity from the Ontario Hydroe lectric Power Commission in Ca nada, "'hlch also supplied more than 1,000 megawatts to ti-tichigan utllltlcs. In \Vashlngton, the temperature reach+ cd 97 and the capital's metropolitan area 11.·as under an air pollution alert for the 17th day this summer. Hot, stagnant alr holding pollution over the arta wu not expected lo dissipate before f"tlday. said the purpose of the inquiry is "to sec that the board of supervisors really ac- co mplishes something" in its efforts to acquire the Upper Bay. r..Irs. Bents stressed that the in- vesti gation is part of the grand jury's "ongoing effort to monitor the operations of all phases of coW1ty government. "\Ve arc not sure at this point whether '"e \Vil! issue a report or not ," P.1rs. Bents said. "If the effort to acquire the bay is mov· ing too slo\\1ly we will have something to say," she declared. "If good progress is being made, v.·c n1ay keep quiet," she said, "but we do \Vant to make sure that the county keeps up the effort to bring the bay into public o"·nership.'' The Irvine Company last April offered its Upper Bay holdings to whatever public agencies are interested in lhem, saying terms of a land sale or trade could be worked out later. The company said it "'as willing to ac- cept any reasonable term s of purchase and stressed that it hoped the public could assume possession ol the Uppe.r Bay as soon as possible. A joint federal, State, county and city agency -the Upper Bay FJeld Com- mittee -has been meeting regularly In an effor t to "·ork out an agreement with the com pany. There has been littl e tangible progress durin g those five months. however. The offer had been made under the threat of a prescriptive rights lawsuit by lhe county. Mrs. Bents ackno\vledgcd that the re have been complaints that certain supervisors have employed delaying tac- tics and said the "Grand Jury 's en· vironm ental committee is following them up. She said Informati on has been re- quested rrom a number of sources In an effort to evaluate the efforts of the board of supervl90rs. Fifth District Supervisor Ro n a 1 d Caspers of Newport Beach, chairman or the county board, is one of those the Grand Jury osked to comment on the progress of negotiations. Ca•pers said he Is preparing a wrltlen commentary containing his views, but \vould not comment directly on t.M· re- quest. Ho.wever. he did cJC:prcss "concern" over what he called "!ootdragglng" by the board :.s a whole. "All the public agencies on !he Field C.mmltlee aro eager to get go Ina." Caspers ,.Id. "It Is only the County of Oranae Iba! <loean 't seem to he In a hur- ry," Board to Study Sires ,, For New Juvenile Hall Six choices for a second J uvenile Hall, all in the southwest part of the county \Vere offered to the Orange County Board of Supervisors Tuesday. - The board members sent the list to the county administrative Qffice and the pro- bation department for a report on the ad- visability of decentralization. The report is due in 60 days. Sites suggested, their location and estimated cost : Horse Thieves Face War Begun Sy Publisher A Capistrano Beach m 8 g a z i n e publisher tW declared "'ar on hon;e th ieves, launching a nationwide project calculated to make it easier for police to find the stolen animals. Bob Tallent, the pubJis1'tf, launched a program whlch amounts '!to two printed ronns -one for horses; the other for all horse owners. Besides giving space tor a verbal description of each animal the forms have line drawings where O\vners can . ad d brands or other distinguishing mark- ings of their animal Locally, the Orange C<lunty SberiU's Office has been dispensing the forms to all horse owners who ask for them. Once completed, the documents go into an 0"11er 's personal fHe and if the animal strays or is lost or stolen, the form is turned over lo law enforcement officera to expedite recovery. SPokesmen fc:-the effort have cited an al arming increase in horse theft all over the nation. Along the South County several major cases have turned up as \Veil. Tallent. \Vbo publishes Horse and Horseman Magazine -as well . as other outdoors-oriented magazines -launched the project after first consulting with the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Office. J ~f O,IN ' .. ' i -42.7 acres at the intersectlon or Crown Valley Park\vay and the San Diego Freeway, $660.000. -27.7 acre s at the same location, $100,000. -23 acres at Alicia Parkway and Aliso Creek Road, $460,000. -25 acres La Paz Road and Aliso Creek Road, $675,000. -25 acres at La Paz Road and P..loulton Parkway, $520,000. (The latter two are near the Nonh American unoccupied plant in Laguna Niguel). -30 acres on the Ortega Highv;ay, eight miles from the San Diego Freeway on the Starr Ranch, $150,000. The last site was considered to be too remote to be seriously considered for the Juvenile Hall location. The proposed facility would have ~ beds and be expandable to 300 beds. There was no comment by residents or the area at TUesday'• meetings. From Pqe l DENSITY ..• mission, in a unanimous vote, establlsfr ed criteria for development or The Shoals, 11101 S. Coast Highway. A re90Jution approving the criteria cans for tourist oriented facilities, in- cluding hotel rooma, a restaurant, and bar. 1be new project will maintain the existing encroachment of The Shoals into the Bluebird CanyOfl right of way. Resolutions for both Machu Picchu and The Shoals now .,.,•ill be forwarded to the city council for final adoption as city policy. Booster Sends Shot VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE (AP) -An Atlas F booster sent an· ex- perimental re-i!.ntry vehicle streaking down the We.stem Test Range over the Pacific Ocean early today. an Air Force spokesman said . From Page l FARM • • • repaired al his 26-acre farm home in San Juan Capistra no. The couple have lived on the fann for 17 years. Shaw said the favorite animal act over ~e years has been Buck Bunny, a Siamese rabbit who rode a rolling cart down a ramp. But one of the most intelligent domestic animals, Shaw has learned b the lowly pig. ' From Pagel HOPKINS ... Dwyer of Three Arch Bay Is chairman or the group. _Dwyer previously announced his caft. d1dacy lor the sanitary dbtrict board but withdrew from lhe race since be wili be moving from the district lhortly following the Nov. IS election. , Directorships up for el~tion this year are held by Charles Petty, P. Norman Anderson and Harold Edwards. 1 Anderson and Edwards have rue~ papers for re-election. Persons wishing to run for the tour. year tenns may oblaln nomination papen at the Registrar of Voters, 1119 E. Chestnut Ave., Santa Ana . Nomlnalion petttionJ must bO signed by IO registered voters within the di1trict and f1 1ed with the registrar by 5 p.m. Friday. * * * Incumbents File In Water Race Both incumbents in the Nov. 6 South Coast County Water District board eltt· tion have filed nom1natlon papers with the Registrar of Voters. , They are Thomas H. Brooks, president of, the water district board and Dtrector P. Norman Anderson . Nomination papers require t he signature of 10 registered voters within the district. Completed papers must be fi led with the Registrar of Voters, 1119 E. Chestnut Ave., Santa Ana, by S p.m. Fri· day. BasketbaRs CLOID SUN DAT I I Yoney Bans & Nets Sox-W'ickdry-Cotton Tube-Tennis Shoes-Basketball-Tennis Football-All Purpose Gym Pants-Reversible T·Shlrts Warnqi Sails , SWeat Sails • TBlllis llacklts HalllbaH Glovas Racquetball Racquets Speedo Swim SUHs Open 9 to 6 Closed Sundays Footballs Playground Balls Duckf aet Fins Water Wonder Boards Skate Boards Back Packs Sleapi111 lli:gs Batk B;:gs lrola!gh Gik3S Repairin1-rires-Tubes J , I 7 ' ' 11 I I I 1 l I t l I I l 1 I 7 , ' • . . S·addlehaek T oday's Fblal ED tTI ON VOL. 66, NO. 241, 7 SECTIONS, 88 PAGES TEN CENTS ' Irvine Approves Emergency Ambulance Plan By JACK CHAPPELL Of 9lle Dally PUtt lt&H The Irvine City Council has approved plans for providing public emergency ambulance transportation for lhe city in coonilnation with the county fire depart- ment. . The council 's action Tuesday night came after a scathing attack on the services provided by commercial am- bulance businesses during emergencies. The council approved major portions of IJie $80,000 proposal, but, declined to authorize euct specllicaUons for the am- bulance equipment 1111,250) because councilmen questioned whether equip- ment proposed was good enough. Robert Goldstein, member of the city Community Health care Services Com- m1ttee , severely criticized the emergency serviC<!S provided by conuner¢al am· bulance companies. Representatives' from S ch a e f e r ' s Ambulance Service and Wind Ambulance Service lobbied for commel'cial rather than public aervlce. . "f could. !!>II you horror stories that you will not believe," Goldstein, a cotmty fireman and medic, Aid. He said be knew of' cues of extremely poorly trained· ambulance attendant>, of "wildcat driven" who drove so badly that medics In the rear ol the vehicle could DOI minister to the victims, and of lnadequaln equipment oo tho vehicles. "U you want secood rate people doing Road Plan Levied County OKs Interim Viejo Meas~res By JACK BROBACK Of 1M D9'1Y f'l .. 1 St.1ft Despite vigorous protests r r o m residents, the Or.ange County Board of Supervisors Tuesday adopted a list o{ recommendations for interim solutions to Mission Viejo traffic problems.~ The recommendations were made by a special oommlttte beaded by Bsrt Spendlove, county planning commilsiooer from the Filth Supervi>orial DiJtrict. Recomrneodatiooa adopted·lnclude > -Install four.way stop ligns at the In· tenecUon of C.OrdiDera Drive and Jeronimo Road. -Effective Sept. 10, modify the barrier on Cordillera Drive to remain closed to traffic entering from the north, but open to traffic lea ving c.ordillera to ·Jeronimo. 'Ibll for · school bu.oea and csrs tranaporth>g •ludeots. -Effective Sept. 10, removt barrier on Carranza Drive at Jeraoimo and in.Stall 25 mph speed ..,. on Cammza. -lnltall cros.swalks on Jeronimo Road at MoaUlla Lane and at carranza Drive. * * * leronimo Sq .. fJble ;Housewives .P.lan .. Battle ' In Court Over Ousure Five bousewll-es who claim that their Orange county SUperlGr Court laW!Ult spesb for the entire NlsliGn Viejo ...,.. munlty will go to couri Oct. S In a bid IA> hsve a judce retOlve the bltlnr ...,. troversy created when the county sealed <if JeronlmO Road from three auburbon streets. Orange County's five supervisors are named u defendant> In the adion filed by Fem Ragon, Alice Diane Shaver, Lynn Seay, Sherrie Wentworth and Gail Serey. Claiming that they speak for "the en- tire Mission Viejo oommunity", the five resident> of the Cordillea Driv~Maotilla Lane-Carranza Drive sect« wW ast Judge Walter Cbaramza through thi!ir lawyen ti> overtun) !he county's dodsion of J111e 21. '1lley ataln that the enellm of bar- ricades bloc'1ng free access .to nearby Jeroobno Rood bas "divided Mission Vie- jo irlto two communities." And .they claim that the closure bas threatened the safety of chlldnn ehterine and leaving the area, has delayed fire vehlclea speeding to the area by as much as five mk»d• and !au added at. least one and ...; bill mn.. to ihe journey ol many local midmts. The writ aought Jn the claa acUon demands thst the county be prdered to Immediately remove the barritades and be compelled. to notore the area to it> former condJUon. It alao demands that the OOUll!J' be ordered to,poy the plaln- tiffa' lqil C09t1, Council Approves Cash \ For College Park ·Park The city of Irvine'• College Park com- munity will soon get a pafk, a:s a result of Chy Council llCliOn 'l'Uesday allocating Jll0,000 for development Ii a peighborhood recnJlioo area. ' quired only iledlcallon of park land, mt developrnenl . '!be 11111,GllO provided by the city will be uoed lor bule'de..topmerlt of tbe 7.75 acre porcel (1111,lljl) and for coo- 1trucllGll of . other !icWllet IUdl u · restrooma, a .tot Jot, and either' tennis cow11, or a 'recreation ~ulldlng. , -Modlly the. signal at the Intersection of La Paz Road amfMuirlands Boulevard to accomIDodate left turn traffic. '-Establish a four·way stop at the In- tersection of Marguerite Parkway with La Paz Road and with Jeronimo. -Accelerate the construction o f Jeronimo Road between Cherry Avenue and Loo Aliso Boulevard. 'Ille oommitlne will meet Sept. 25 to review data and traffic count. resulting (See ROADS, Poce II Portables F 9r S~"/wols Hit D~lay '!'bi ·~ \iii<\ Grec&tr•• ''lnitant" icla.ali ~ io.op..:liePI, 11 -~ bo quiln so Instant, 1"lne Unified School District officials hsve an- nounc:Od. O!Hiln lmprovemeDts at both elemen- tary schools bepn a few mooths ago and deijvery of portable clnssrooms by the opening of sCbOo1 wa.s set for this month. That lituatlon bas 'been lhrown Into doubt by the financial condJUoo ol the pere>I flrm ol Augora Mod u l ar Industries, mauufacturer of the portable c1wrooma: U.S. Fi nendaJ ·Ii San Dlqo 11led bankruptcy papeR Jlily 23, dfSlrlct of- ficials said. Although Augora, a lllbsidiary, ls 801· V<'1t. It Is hsvlng dlff~ty rib• dellvery scbedWes, as a result. One classroom out of 20 planned hss been delivered to Culverdale, which ls suPllC>'ed to boule 511> student> at 3S31 Main St. ~ Four cl~ms have arrived at the Greentree siln at IA9!12 Sleepy Hollow St. That llCbool ls planned for 250 chlldreo. o. .. King, district facil ities planner, aald Aupa llas prcimJsed deli,.ry of si% more 1111111 .for Culvenlale by .Sept. u. and "the balance we 6ope to hsve by Oct. l. • "But tbq're coming in slow," he ad- ded. · Dllttiet-officials are s t u d y i n g alternative "8Y5 of houaing 1tuc1eni. dur-ine the first few weeks of school "without dobble leSSloos," King emjmlsized. lW!lblJities !Delude using :<:omllJllllllY ~ ~ ocllool!, ~ "1d·lhe U .S: Naval Relerve trallllng CODI!< at the Santa Alla Marine Corps Air Sll1lon. The council acted In responae to re- quests by the College Park Homoowners ,usociation. 'lbe College Park developer ~Id mt put In the Pfrk because th• tract had been approved by the OOUlllY prior to city incorporation. The county had. re- 'Ille COWICO left determlnatton as to whst amenities· will be added up to the Community Service Co~ workh\g with resldeol> of the oomm\inl!Y and-city llafl. • I • )[lag Aid the --• "'1!aI ODii>-' ~I fnlm the. mlHtary. oboul. Ille ol the training Ctllinr. y • Orange Ceut 1t'eaeher -Tbe sun wtll . peek through lhoae 1"' clouds Thursday morning Jeav- tng the rest of the day fairly ""'"Y· Highs will ..... fnlm 70 1! the beacbet IA> 75 Inland. Overnight lowsl!H$. . INSW E TOlti\ l' It .,., a gov time in N <ID Y or~ -even though they lost. mile,... ablu. The homoauuol commu- ,flitU plaued the police dtpar~ menl In a frieodlV l>as~baU go,.. lo better tlatl r Image. Story Paa• 7. AtYwts.rYltl I L..M. ..,. ,. -. CllHtnMI J.lt c..... c:.r.w ,. ---" o.,. ... , " Otlittl........ 14 ••ten .. , ... ~ • ,._,..,..,.... t+U -~·U .............. ,, -llCIM • AMI LI""" a MM•• 't --...... ,.... It --. _,_ M '""' '"" Dr.S .......... M PMt MM.ttt •u T......_ 14 --·-. ~ ..... ,.... --. .I The council's action came on a unanimous vote (Councilrilan E. Ray Quigley wss absen~) however, It follow- ed an UDBuccessful motion by Cowt· cllwoman Gabrielle Pryor IA> delete fund- ing Ii the clubhouse, restrooms and "fancy tot lots." Michael O'Grady, bomeowner's presi· dent, told the council that 60 percent of · the children in lhe communlty were under age I, and that the tot lot was , needed. He alao urged tho development of tennis couri! inltoad of a ''$50,GllO recreaUon cootrol bu11dlng." Councllman Henry Qulcley oolnd the housing development wu rapidly being built out, and resldeol> Jn other Irvine communities have neighborhood parks. "I thlok these people bave a right to lhelr park," he uJd. Tbe city will at... auume maintenance cost. for the property. In like action, the city council agreed to pay 117,000 to reploc:o the existing mallllnctlonlng 11 g h t I n g system throuahout the entire Ranch park. Both lleml were oupported by the Community Services Con'lllll!slon, aod had been cut fnlm tbc city budget In budget study sessions. Additional ,.. .... due to a higher than anticipated aaselOl!CI valuation and ln- creut1 In stain monies returned to Ibo city will be tapped for the flmdlng. 'Ille new dlatrict bad ~ordered f5 poriabfe classrOoms, 30 of ·w~twere planned ifcr-the two "lllltant" acbools. Delivery dea<llines for the eatra hou .. ~the: dlJtrict school! also will be King said all'poriables will be taken to -Culverdali ~ Gniaitree unlti their needs' are ftlleC:I. Tho lr'ilne Compaoy is coordinating 1lle -at tbe two-.chools, wtilCh is on schedule, l>istrlct Superintendent Stan core,, ..w. ' U.S. Flnandal's cond.itkll wasn 't ~.~ !)le bid was awarded to lb • ..,.....,,, (Jorey said. The district's flnanctal lnten:st ts secured through pelti&dce. •bonds. . , . . ' ' DELINQUEN T TAX } ' .. LIST PUBLISHED ' Tite deldllne . for property t •• payment> bu come and gone and hun- dreds of 0....., eo.ot property owners hsve yet to P*Y tbe ptper. Cringe c...t1 Tu Collector Ri>beri Cl\rod'• list of delinquent ta~yen ap- pears on Pages Ill and Z7 of toctay'a Dally Pilot. • a second rate service, go to a com- mercial service," Goldstein sald. "If that's what you want, you can get It ctieap, II he said. In preparing the emergency tronsportatloa plan, the city staff bsd solicllnd bi<la fmm eight ambulance com- panie1. • . AnnlilBI coit for commercial service varied from $C8,000 to $84,000. The cott- tract with the county forestry and rescue depaijment would nm $80,!20 annually, not including the cost of the vehicle. Walter Schaefer of Schaefer ambulance, criticized the cost to the taxpayers for tbe city-county ambulance service. He said that of the 116 call• In the city Jast year, only 25 percent wefe a·ctuaJ "life endangering emergencies" of the type the public ambulance would handle. "It11 going to cost the tupayer some m.oney," Schaefer said. Tbe city would bill vlcti1!13 a proposed 13.1 per call and ll a mile. Tbe staff estimated annual income at $6,000 to $7,500. Nonemergency service would still be provided by commercial ambulance, and the city would rely on commercial services to provide the bat:kup care. Councilman William Fiscbbach all"'d that the public ambulance was expensive, but, he said the service was impc>rtaqt (See AMBULANCE, Pap ~) . ...,,... ........... MONDAY Wilt: BE LAST DA)" FOR FARM;ORl!NTEq,' Sl!VEN-ACRE AMUSEMENT PAllK · · , Nestled' ' • ~-eff'(:~n·Vall~y Por~y,..,.. UM!tl to Ill Cowlaoy c.,,;,."'lll!d' . • ' > . . . . ' t \,"\'. ,l •• ' ' 4 -f ~ '~" t • • • • • • ' \ Old ;M~Donal1a~s Clos'ing M~sion ·Viejo .Amusement Far.m Not Paying Off 8y JAN .WORTH Of• ... Dllfr· .......... "Tlil! thing musta gone lirdund a jillion times/l FiI1tOn Shaw-sald. Wtib a-smile as he "'1d bis wife Kay cllmbed on to the ·ot(l-fasbioOOd ·mUJe-drlveD carollsel for a pho\ograph. ' 'nfe· part, Old McDonaid•s Farm in M'witllt ";::tr was desedod, except for the ilqUi · · ' ol .cbil:lia\s and an oc- casiM.IL pig:'1 ·grunt: ~ , ·,.. 1 ~ • Since IUt .September,, the seven·aCre farrn;o~t~ childien·'s ~ anlusement park ·has 'been open only on .w~kends. Novi . even . Uia't comJ)t'o.u}ise has p~ved ~ble, ·BDd the shaw's,. owners ol the tot ·spot, hsve decided -to -Close-i down. 1 • Monday will be tbe fast _day !II. opera, tion. Though Sbaw said good naturedly he J~dge Orders Nixon to. Give .. ' . Tapes/to· Him W~TON (AP) ...,-TM WJtergate trtat·~· att•mo1•1'"onlettd ~· denf Ni%on to•llorn over !oi;!~~e's private inspedl'l'l -tapes .. .,,,..,.... by tbe Watet0!6prosecutor, but stayed the order, for ilV. da)'s IA> permit a~al. U.S. D!Strict Court .'J udge John J. Slrica said in a ruling certain to be ap- pealed· that Naon must "produce forthwith for the court's eumlnaUon in camera" the tape, recordings of Ni1on1s cooW..l!Ons with key aides Implicated In 'the Watergate Investigation. ·He ontered the five<lelay and added that be would extend the stay Indefinitely li'the completlon ol appeals requires it. Sirica's order was tbe first Ume in history that a judge bis oonunanded a President to produce ma~rials over his objectiona. Nixon haa claimed thst to dioc!Ole the documenta and tapes would vlolste the confidentiality of t b e . prflllciency. • . . , ' . Slrlca called his course a middle grounil betweon the two conlllctlng claims of the President and of the Walnrgaln prosecutqrs, who want IA> ex, amine the tapei In their !nve tigation of the Wllnrgaln· affair. He said thst without discrediting the str<ngth Ii the Watergaln grand Jury's claim to tbe lnfonnatlon be could not 11as matters now stand. nde that the present claim of privilege Is Invalid.'' If ~ ls apparent that the tapes are Ir- relevant to the Investigation, "or th at for •late reasons they cannot be lnln> duced Into lhe case, the subpoena . . . would be useless," he said. -•, ' and his wife are "just two happy programs or con;unercials, we11,mlsl all .failllre!," there's little chance the two the litUe kids we've bad here." will aetUe Ior inactivity. . "We've never made any money here,'' · Shaw, a California naUve, baa.been an Shaw added. "We made .a lo\ at KitoU's animal trainer for 35 years. At Old but when we moved down here there McDonald's Farm bis_ tra!Jie9 ~abbit, seemed Jo be i9rrt• confusion In tbe Buck Bunny, rode a earl down a •hill A public's miod atiout mi.re we"'""'. and pig wen\ down a slide .. Chickens rang who we were." '· / beJ!S.· · . ·. , , . They said they love the location, leased He figm:es hi• tra!Iiing talent wtll-a>me. from the Mission Viejo Compmy. Hestl- in handy fn teleyision and film work. -, ed in a little canjon oU Ciown Va!ley _Kay Shaw, wholl\et'Folton when ll>IY Parkway, the-spot uud to be a camp fur were botb working at. Knoll's Berry cowhoys·: of !be original Mi!sion Viejo Farm, spec\alizes In c!llldren'sadlvlttes land company .. amt ~uring Old MacDonald's fobr years lb •11ill ·eliCalyptus and pepper trees In Mission -Viejo-<be-has-caterecl -bUJF-werrcanofullrpreserv~ dreds of birthday _parties !or clllldreo on alllmal park was built four years ago. the . gro~. "We're proud that we've made our liv- The Shsws. hop\>· to direl!\ their eUorts Ing In an honest way," Shaw Hid. to educatl~al television.. "We1ve DU1de a lot of kids happy." Of tho 75. domestic ~s ar the . Many .of the old·fashloned blacksmith fai:m . including rabbits, exotic breeds of equipment, harnesses, carriages, and chickens, burrows, mul~, goats, pigs and saddlel. adding an authentic flavor to the ~es, the Shaws will. keep Wllv the ra~ park are those which Shaw collected and bits. . 1..,-""... repaired at his 20-acre fann home in San . The rest will be sold, possibly to two Juan Capistrano. similar ·armpanies 'whb ·~ in the The couple have lived on the farm for 17 ~e kind of enlertainment, • years .. :!f"s is, i i84 ~n;• Mf,. Shaw Shair· said Uie favorite ari.imal act over s-."Even ~ we go In~ ~·· TV '(See".JJ' AR.M, Page II .. ·~ '-y •• '. Thu111bed Down . . . Officer Bail,s Out ~os~ctor A.s!fapping, l\tardod gold prospector !rom Hope, Alaska, thumbed a ride south out of Newport Beach for San Diego Tuesda,. to see a sister facing a leg amputation , after a sliort stopover in jail. HE IDT Uie road with 54 cent> In ready mooe1 and two mining claim.fln his ,pocket after a sympathelic policeman loaned biin '2 to' make up tbe differ- ence In an 18 fine. Patrick W. J1111e1, M, standing si% feet, three lncbes tall and weighing 217 pounds, was formally arrested and booked oi1 a charge of hitchhiking In the roadway. Patrolman Bob Hardy' claimed Jones was standing in traffic Janes In the ·3900 block o! West Coast Highway, holding up a sign saying: san Diego. • THE om~11 cla!mod se~ cars had to awerve ai:ound the miner. Officer Hardy Aid Jones, who ""' ooly 11.54 in cash, carried oo !ormaJ identification and bad no obvious •locl.J Ues1 auch as relaOves ln the area, '° he was taken IA> heedquarten. Authorities were_concemed about Jones' !allure to carry a drlvet's lletnM, draft card or other acceptable ideoU!lcation. "HE DAD two $20 tnlveler's checks, a hunch of P81*1 ...i o couple of mining claims with the name Patrick W. Jones," sold lllOlllet patrolman who asked not to be Identified. "I've be<n to Alaska," he COllllnued . "And tbe people thoni have a Pl" ticular \ype of pe rsonality. He seemed to be a good guy. "Ooo't print this," said the sympatbetlc officer. "but I loaned bim a couple of bucks to make ball." ' ( Uppe1· Bay , P1·ogress 1 t Thl' Orange County G1·nnd Jury is con- ' ducting an investigation to sre tr Orange Collnty supervisors arc moving fa st enough toward bringing Upper Newport Bay into publlc ownership, it was learned today. Marcia Bents , grand jury foreman , said the purpose of the inqlliry is "to see that the board of supervisors really ac- complishes something" in its efforts to acqui re the Uppe r Bay. ~fr11. Bents stressed that the in- "esligation is part of the grand jury's "ongoing effort to monitor the operations or all phases of county government. •·we are not sure at this point whether \\'C will issue a report or not ," Mrs. Bents said , "If the effort to acquire the bay Is mov- ing too slowly we will have something to say." she declared. "If good progress is being made, \\'C 1nay keep quiet," she said, "but we do \rant to make sure that the county keeps up the effort to bring the bay into pub\lc 0¥.nership." The Irvine Company last April offered its Upper Bay holdings to whatever public agencies are interested in them, saying tenns of a land sale or trade could be worked out later. Mille at School To Take Jump; Program .Ended SChools along the Orange Coast will ~ have to raise the price of milk sold by the carton when students return to classes this fall. • l I • • ' • The , U.S. Department of Agriculture has auapended ils school lunch milk subsidy program because Congress hasn't yet appropriated money to buy the milk. • The cancellation will affect about 4<I million children nation·wlde, federal of· flciala estimated. Only schools which operate with a ''type A" federally·subsldlzed lunch pro- gram will no Jong~r get the subsidy, which ha1 averaged three cents per pint of milk. SCboolJ that have no lunch program at all will continue to get milk subsidies. This Involves about six million students. Those subsidies will be paid for out or $25 million approved by Congress under a "continuing resolution " prior to summer recessi agricullure otricials said . Action hasn't . been tu ken on the agriculture departn1ent 's full fiscal 1974 appropriation. A $97 million allocation is pending in a conrerence committee. ''\Vhen Congress provides the money ror this program, we will reconsider our action," said a department official. But children won 't have any problems if they buy the "nutritloµs type A" lunch , a number of Orange Coast school of· flcials polled said toda y. The regular. subsidized meal Includes mil k as part or the menu and won 't cost any more this fa ll, said a food service representat ive In the Newport-~1esa Unified School District. Milk costs the district 9.5 cents pei pint and has been sold for six cents, with th e federal government paying the dlf· ferencc. the Newport-Mesa District of- liclal explained . If a child buys the milk a la carte. he or she will hae v to pay 10 cents for it this fall. Officials in Laguna Beach and Irvine ,Unified and lluntington Beach and Seal Beach elementary school districts said their food programs arc similarly af- fected by th e fund ing cutback. Fran Morton . an Irvine Unified District ofricisl, said only the G re en tr ee . Culverdale and El Camino Real elemen- tary schools in Irvine don 't have a lunch program. Children attending thos e schools will slill be able to buy milk for five cent!, she said. Ol.ANGI COAST 1s DAILY PILOT T"9 OrWll/f COOi D.t.I LT P1L0l, wllll Wf!.tfil ll °"*1111'<1 lt!o Nt""'·"••n. t1 11UbJlf/led by ,,,. 0rt"'lle C011t Putr1IWll1>9 COl!IN llf, Se"• '''' edlllont ''' 1>111111111.0, Mon<!Ar 111rouo11 F tldty, !Or Coil• Mfll . Newpaft Bf tdl, Hoollll!llOl'I Bt1,lllFOU11l1•n \lltloy, \.f911!1f ... , ... lrvl11tlSIOOltbO~k Ind l t 11 c1,,,,...,,, !111 JVM C1p!11rtr>0. A t lntlt tf'fioMt t<lll'°" II p,itih1lle<1 5,1uro1ys -Sllf'd1y1. r .... ptl..cl"I pUOlllll•nv •f111t 11 II J» Wtll llt t J! .... I, Cff!I Mna, (llllOl'lllt , t;&;••, Rob11t N. W11d l'•n•llM •nd P11111 .. 11r· J1c• R. Cwrl1v Vkt l'rM~I t NI Gtnt••I Ml 1>ft" fhof!'l11 l(,,.;1 Edn~t Tltolll1t /\. M ~r11hi~1 MtNfill!I l!O!•or Ch1rf11 H. loot Ri<ht•d P. N111 Att1111ftt Miwwoin; rco,1001 Ofllo• (1111 MM ' »D Wtll •1r ST'ffl Nl'W'tllll 8 .. (11: .iUJ fffwpJtl Bo.lt Yl ll L"'lt-Blfdl: 217 l'otltf Av.-iut """''""'-"' lttdll 17111 •Heto '""""'"° S..i Clt""OM•: JN Htrlfl II C.111!1W1 llnt , ........ 17141 '4J-4JJt Cl_,fte4 Atl..rtldtt '41·$171 S.. C........_ All ..,.rtMt.... f ,.,.... 4tJ-4420 Cetirrlf!lt. 'Vl. 0,..,.. CM" PW!illl"'f ~r. Ht !WWI , .. ,., 1!1W"11i.-. Wllltltl ~ljtr ... M""1 .... lllt II-lit _., lie ~ •""""' ••i.1 otr· !'llulon fl tclfl'l"t'9f\1 IWtllt, -. ci..t jllll"" ..... ti C11t• ,,,._, C• IWlll• Mll:Ft.--.. lw UPTltr UAJ -ltrir, ~ ..,.H IJ,IS ll'IOflill1"1 lllllll1r, .. 11,..,,,.... 11.6' """'1111.,. -• .i,~ ,,,,._~Jo. '!li,.. ! :~ I 'l'rip Cut Sort Agp.~w Daughter Life Threatened WASlllNGTON (UPI) -Vice Presi- dent Spiro T. Agnew 's daughter Susan cut short a voyage on the hospital ship USS Hope because of threats on her life made In Brutl, an Agnew spokesman ..Id today. Marsh Thomson, the vice president's press secretary, said the famUy made "a judgment .... not to take any further risk!:" and arranged to have the 7.6-year· old Miss Agnew ,.tum to Washington. Miss Agnew, who sailed aboard the Hope in February with the lntenUon of returning 1n December, worked with audio-visual education equipment. "There had been threats on her lite down there (Brazil) and although the Brazilians thought they could take cart of the situation and the vice president has expre51ed coofldence in -the ability of the Brazilian government to provide necessary security, ·as a f,.ther he \li'anted to lake the prudent measure or bringing her closer to home," Thomsoo said. The Washington Star-News reported to- day !hat Dr. William Walsh, who founded Project 11ope under which the ship sail' on humanitarian missions, said both ~ and Miss Agnew received several threats -Including one last week that could not be ignored. "This was a threat which we felt wa.s more serious and American intelligence agreed with Brazilian intelligence,'.' Walsh told the Ster·News. . D•Hy ~llot St•fl ~lllfe FULTON AND KAY SHAW AR E "JUST TWO HAPPY FAILURES" WHO WILL KEEP BUSY Seven·acre Old McDonald's Farm in Mission Viejo Was Quiet Except for Squawking Chickens Irvine Tax Rate Figure At 33 Cents "The Brazilians felt she was \vorth 1 great deal in ransom in exchange' fot political prison e rs and theit responsibility was greater than ours," said Walsh . Board to Study Sires For New Ju venile Hall Six choices for a second Juvenile Hall , all in the southwest part of the county v.-ere ofrered to the Orange County Board of Supervisors Tuesday. The board members sent the Ust to the county administrative orflce and the pro- bation department for a report on the ad- visability oC decentralization. The report Is due in 60 days. Sites suggested, their location and estimated c.oat: -42.7 acres at the Intersection of Crown Valley Parkway and the San Diego Freeway, $860,000. -27.7 acres at the same location, 1700,000. -23 acres at Alicia Parkway and Aliso Creek Road, $46-0,000. -25 acres La Paz Road and Aliso From Page l ROADS ... from implementation or the recom- mendations. Van Stevens of lhe f\1ission Viejo Com- pany read a lengthy statement from the company regarding the st reet problem. It said that the Mission Viejo company had no say on street and highway plans outside of its boundaries. The letter said the roots of the problem li e in the fact that there ~re missing links between the arterials built within Mission Viejo and those proposed to be con- structed in the area around it. Listed as missing links were Alicia Parkway to an d including the in- terchange with the San Diego Freev,.ay: .Jeronimo Road from its northern terminus to Los Al isos Boulevard and to El Toro Road; Trabuco Road from Its northern terminus to El Toro Road . and Los Alisos Boulevard from its western terminus lo ~1uirlands Boulevard in El Toro and lo Laguna Hills. .. The missing Jink s result in vi rtually no ar!C'rial highway connections between the north ern part or Mission Viejo :ind the San Diego Freeway to lhe "'est or El Toro Road to the norlh," the letter charged . Among !he recommendations made by Raub. Bein and Frost. consulting engineers hired by the company, are a temporary connection of Jeronimo to El Toro Road by means of a road dip across Aliso Creek: a removal of st reet 'closure at Cordillera Dr ive by school opening; in· stall a full signal at Cordillera and Jeronimo: assign a la1v enforcement of- ficer to the troubled area dur ing morning and ev eni ng peak lraffic hours: retain closure at Montllla until nor thbound on ramp to the freeway al Alicia in· te rchange is open , remove closu re at Carranza Drive. Creek Road, $675,000. -25 acres at La Paz Road and Moulton Palkway, $520,000. (The latter two are near the North American uooccupied. plant in Laguna Niguel ). -30 acres on the Ortega Highway, eight miles from the San Diego Freeway on the Starr Ranch, $1!0,000. The last site was considered to be too remote to be seriously conaldered for the Juvenile Hall location. The proposed facility would have 200 beds and be expandable to 300 beds. There was no comment by residents of the area at Tuesday's meetings. Teachers Honor Saddleback Scl1ool Trustees . ' Trustees of the Saddleback Vafley Unified School District ¥.'ill be bonorEd at a.--teacher-sponsored luncheon at noon Sept. 7 at Los Alisos Intermediate School in El Toro. 'I'he new district began official opera- ti on of area schools July I and the board \\"as organi~ after unification elect ions ir: June, 1972. Jn the past year, the tru stees have "established a rapport with th e teachers. administrators, students and community 1vhich is seldOm ei1:perienced in our socity today,·• a representative of S8ddleba ck Valley .Educators Association fS VEA) said. In addition to thanking trustees for thei r leadership, the program will include a presentation of the SVEA charter from the California Teachers Association. Ji m 'Vehan , e math teacher at Mission Viejo High School, is president of SVEA . Los Alisos is at 25171 Moor Ave. Ex-convict Held 111 Brutal Killing SAN PABLO (AP ) -A former San Quentin prison inmate has been arrested for investigation tlf murder in the death or another ex-convict whose bullet-riddled hody was found in a ca r trunk , police said. Acting on an anonymous tip Tuesday, police look James ''Short y'' Schreckengost. 35, into ctistody in co.,.. nection with the shooting ... of Greg Riet, 28, of Richmond. I1~vi ne Coun cil Action . These are the principal action s taken by the Irvine City Council Tuesday night. TAX RATF~: Set city tax rate at 33 cents per $l00 assessed valuation, the same as last year. GREEl\'TREE PA_RK : Approved a Greentree Homes Associat.ion request to I.um over the park Area to the associ ation as a pri vate neighborhood park. subject to clearing legal details. LOITl<:RING LAWS: Continued consideration of a loiterlng and curfew statute because representatives from the requesting CUlverd.:ile Community At- sociatlon f11iled to attend the meeting. ~MBULANCE SERVICE: Tnltiated an $80.000 a year program to provld~ public ambulance emergency service, but baJketl et approving an eJact am· bulance vehicle saying that lhe propo:;ect $14,000 van model might not be good enough or equipped wil~ all the desired medical gear. UNIVERSITY PARK NOISE: Snubbed a •1aff re<ommendaUoo to "reoelve and file " a r eport on noise In the are• of the University Park Shoppfna Center, and ordered city orlicJals to drart a noise ordinance. DESIGN REVIEW: Tl!lbled a proposa l for a design review board 1nd1 In~ stead, development of a staff design review protess. ' . COi\fA-tUNlfV COUNCIL: Approved formation of a community coordinat· 1ng council. The group would assist in formation or a community calendar to minimize confllct11 Jn schedullng by various city organizations. <> ( F,....P.,.e1 FA RM • • • the years has been Buck Bunny, a Siamese rabbit "'ho rode a rolling cart down a ramp. But one of the most Intelligent domestic animals, Shaw has learned, is the lo"•ly pig. "I've taught pigs to take their own showers, turn on a radio, alt al a table, and eat Ice cream," be said. Chickens are valuable for their depen· dablllty, not their genius. "I've got one chicken that's worked for me 12 yean," Shaw said. Italian Consul's Son , 26, Booked CALE A,CO (AP) -Four persona, in· eluding 1he son of the lt.all111 ConJUl General in san Francisco, have been ar- rested here on various narcotics charges, customs agents said. Nico!A Maurtdo DeGlovannf, Ill, of San Francisco, was aftoested Tuesday after customs officials discovered ooe kilo of marijuana under his hat and al.I: more pounds of it in his car, they said. He is the aon of Com~neral ,Lugi DeGiovannt who could D<>t be re•ched for conunent. But a spokesman at the con- sulate called the arrest "a most wr fortunate altualion." FromP.,.eJ AMBULANCE ••• The Irylllo, Qty O>tmcll set the city 1973-74 property tax rate at 33 cents per $100 of asse!Sl'd valuation in action Tues- day night, the same a.s it was last year, The combined city budget is ·$4.3 mlllioa. · Approval of the tix rate, which is sec- ond ioo'eSt in the county -Yorba Linda has no tax rate -came u.'ith Councilman Henry Quigley voting against the measure. ~r Jolm Burtoo, Councilwoman Galrlello Pryor and Councilman William Filcbbach voted in favo1\ while Coun- cilman E. Ray Quigley was a1¥ent. Coundlman Henry Quigley originally proposed a tax rate of 25.8 cents per $100 cl. URS8ed valuaUon, but received no council support I« hil motloo. Hil ~ rate ii lbe same as mldents of lbe University Park com- munity were peying to lbe county prior to incorporation. 1be 33-<:ent rate determined last. fiscal year for the city's first municipal budget v.·as the average of all the Irvine com- munities tax rates established by the county's taxing code areas. Other cit)"'wide taxes or siinlDcance are tbo county library tar rate of an estimated 12 Clllts w •100 of a...- valuatloo and ihe crun\y lire protection rate of an estimated 36 cents per $100 889eSSed valuation. The total of the I t!nt .indk:ated ao estlmated/!Qrdral*itllf! to Hrown.i' of a $40,000 hxne. The spending plan calls !or expenditure of $2.5 mllllon ln the opera tions budge!, and 'I.I million m c a p I t a I Im· provements. Miss Agnew told the Star·News that her return bad nothin& to do with the i~ vestigatlon of her father in connectioq: ¥.'ith alleged kickbacks from P..1aryland contractors . On that score, she '"'as quoted as saying: " ... I don't feel any cause for concern be<:ause I know my father is an hooest person." Heat Threatens Power Supplies In East States By The AIMK:ilted Pren With UXklegree temperatures lhtt1t.n· ing, the New York State Power Pool put a statewide Clve percent voltage reduction into effect today . Other utilities on the. East Coast and in !he f\1idv;est braced for another bout with severe electric power demands as the wave of tg, mugy air bung on. The cut'back in New York came thret hours earlier than the 5 perct.nt cut Tuesday which the pool said enabled it to meet a record demand of 20,132,000 kilowatts at' mldaftemoon. Temperatures in the rni<f..90s caused massive con- sumption or electricity by air con- dJlioners and some power failures were r<ported. ' A spokesman r~ast hat.\;,day1s de-- mand also would pass 20 million kilowatts. Auto companies closed down aeveral Mldwel!ltern plants because or the be:•t wave, while aome 750 1welterlna:' worken 1t two olber plant.I limply walk· I • s L _ l ed off their Jobi. rvr.ne C1wo New York City suffertd through I year-high temperature of 98 Tuesday a1 enough to the residents to justify the ••-Meet Canceled ecnsolid•ted EdiJOll reported • rooord pense. power demand of l ,151 megawatt.I. Tbt lie questioned, however, whether the temperature-humidity Index hit 15, which vehicle proposed for purdllle. by the city Tonight's regularly ICbeduled meeting a opoltesman for the NaUooal Weather v.·as adequate, and suggested that a more of the Jrvine Unified School Diltrict Service said meant "utter misery.,, expensive unit might be called for. Board of Education baa been canceled. The power pool got BOS megawatts of Council agreed in principle to the city Too many board member• are eJ:· extra electricity from the Ontario emergency service, but ordered COm· peeled to be 1beent, a district spokesman Hydroelectric Power Commls1ton In munily Services Director Paul Brady to said. Henct, a.sallowed under state law, canada, which also supplied more than come back with altem1Uve cboicei for a district official will show up at 1,00'.I megawatts to Mlchle:an utilities. ambulance vehicles and equipment. University High SChool and adjourn the In Washington, the temperature reach- The Women's Club Jrs. of Irvine In· meeting for lack of a quorum. eel 97 and the capital's metropolitan area dicated It would be willing to lead a fund It im't known if 1 special meeting will was under an air pollution alert for lhe raising drive for acquisition of the am· be called between now and the next 17th day Utls sununer. Hot, stagnant air bulance ~ an effort praised by Coun· regularly scheduled board meet.in& on holding pollution over the area wu not cilwoman Grabrielle Pryor. Sept. 10. expected to dissipate before Friday. I ~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;~ ~ -Sox-Wlckdly~ttoa Tube-T lllllis Shoes-lasketblB-Terais Footba~O Purpose Gym Pants-Rnersi!* T·Sbits Wannap Slilts sweat salts Tiiiis Ram ffalllllall GIMs Racquatbd Racquets Spndo SWiD Salts Open· 9 to 6 Closed Sundays Basketballs Yoney Bans & Nets FootbaRs Playground Balls Duckfeet Fins Water Wonder Boards Skate Boards Back Packs Slee~ng Bzgs Ba&k Bzgs Ralol&h Bikes Repaimf-Tm-Tubes CLOlll IUNtAY • I I I·, I ~ I 'I I I l I I I I I r I Q I Innocent Through Insanity- SAN RAFAEL (AP) -A jury has found 22-year..old Brent Bedayan innocent by reason or insanity of shotgun· ning a Mill Valley family to death last October. "It was clear that Bedayan did have a psychotic delusion about Danny and there W8$ some quesUon 11bout his father as the enforcer," said jury foreman Dale A. Stopp after announcing the verdict Tues· da~. "BUT WE couldn't find any clearcut reason why he killed Ruth~ That's when we foood him insane,'' Stopp said. Bedayan had been accused of killing Melvin Schallock, 61, his wife Ruth, 5&". and his son, Daniel, 20, last March 16 and then burning their home. thi! was not an insane act by a young boy \\ilO had nothing to gain, then there are no legally insane people in the state of Calilornia. "l want to 'thank you for Mr. and Mrs. Bedayan" Cox said. "1 don't think Brent can thank you now." · •jTRE COURT'S instructions to the jury directed them to return a verdict of voluntary manslaughter," Bales said. "The results would have been different if tt.e judge bad given them my felony·murder instructions, which would have made the tileory o( diminished capacit y irrelevant." In the 20 days of trial testimony, Bedayan was label· ed a paranoid-schizophrenic by five psychiatrists. They said he hlld delusions of pain im- pulses sent telephatically from Daniel Schallock arKI saw the elder Schallock as a gangland· type "enforcer." • V"I TeltPhllt ' Bil~ing for f'11nds Eighteen bicycle riders from Sacramento, between 15 and 22 years·old, are bik· ing across the country. The group, pedaling past the Capitol Tuesday, hopes to forestall curtailment or Red Cross services in Sacramento. KUJ,naped 11-year-old Home Again -· 'Owes $4.4 Million' ' ' DAILY PI LOT • 5 I Against Ex-chief Mahe11 ' - l.&)S ANGELES .!AP) -A~ torney~ for Howard Hughes contend that Robert A. Maheu. the deposed chief of Hughes' Nevac;IB empire, owes the recluse billionaire more than $4.4 million. Hughes' Su1nma Corp. at· tomeys listed the sum when they gave notice in federal court Tuesday that they would file a counter-complaint Sept. 17 against Maheu, who is seek· ing $13.7 million danlages in a libel suit against Hughes Tool Co. ~IAHEU FlLED his suit in federal court two months after the January 1971 telephonic Dead Fire Fighter's -Ashes To Be Spread SACRAMENTO (API -The ashes of a 21.year-old San Diegoan who died fighting a fire in the ·mountainous Big Sur area v.•ill be scattered in corpsmen conduct an evening men1orial service in his honor in the Big Sur State Park. O'Nea / said. that same region by his fellow He reported Hyme's mother fire fighters, a s tate requested the action. spokesman said. Hyme \Vorked for the corps Jack O'Neal, spokesman for for 14 months and was based the state Department o r at the state agency's Los Osos Conservation, said Tuesday Center near San Luis Obispo the ashes of Danny Hyme will before his death Sunday. ' news conference by a man who said he was Hughes. J\taheu said he was libel;dj when the man explaine(i the reasons for ~1a heu 'I discharge. Maheu's suit Is scheduled to come to trial before U.S. District Court .Judge tlarry Pregerson Oct. 23. / Pregerson requested the ai:· counting of funds which al· torneys for Hughes' Summa Corp. CQntend are owed to Hughes by Maheu. SUl\t~IA CQR.P. is the wholly Ov.'Jled Hughes firln which holds title to Hughes' Las Vegas lxildings. The ,CQurt tiling says Maheµ O\\'es Hugh es $4,458,4'4.38. That sum includes $2,100,oob paid Maheu when he was Hughes' to p executive in Nevada from 1967 to 1970. Maheu's attorney, Mort9n Galane, said in Las Vegas that tlaheu would not COilUT}ent. The seven-woman, five-man jury de1iberated a little over four hours Tuesday . before finding Bedayan legally insane. The same jury had convicted Bedayan oo three counts of voluntary manslaughter Mon- day evening in the "guilt" pllase of the trial. WHEN MARIN C.Ounty Dist. be spread Thursday-.night by ' 11is body has already been LOS ANGELES CAP) -district attorney's office . said are filed later today. He has was anxious to get some California Ecology Corps fire cremated and his ashes arc Nea rly a week after her kid· Robert 'Lee Ray, 49, would be been OOo"ked for investigation privacy and thanked police fighters. being stored at the Mission nap. 11-year-old Tracy Gayle arraigned in Van Nu y s of k.idn3ping in the case. and the news media for help in The ash spreading will take ~·Tort\Jary in ri.tonterey, O'Neal "The propriety of M r . i\.1aheu's conduct \Vil l be deciP.· ed by a jury of his peers1;• Galane said in a telephone in· Atty. Bruce Bales asked Tues- day that the jury be polled, each member affirmed the In· nocent verdict by reasons of insanity on all three counts. Greenfield was home again to-Municipal Court after charges The father said his family the case. place after. Hyme's fello\v said. day, released from hospital 1---------=-----------'--------------''-----~-'--------------------------, treatment for a drugging, beating and rape. terview. Marin County Superior Court Judge Henry , J . Broderick immediately turned Bedayan over to the state Department of Men t a I Hygiene for transfer to a C31ifomia mentaJ facility, He called the verdict "a sound result in the case." Before they began delibera· tions, Bales had told the jurors that "at the critical moment, Brent Bedayan could have stopped. But he consciously chose pot to." BEDA YAN, slouched in his chair beside public defender Frank Cox, showed virtually no e.rDotioo as the verdict was read and the jury polled. Cbs: had compared his client to a "pressure cooker" that "blew up." He said that "if Doctor Gets Fraud Rap LONG BEACH (AP) -A Long Beach doctor ha• been indicted on charges o f Afedicare fraud in connection with a hospital he owned here. Dr. Phil Hansen, 64, and two hospital employes were charg- ed in 21 counts 0 r misrePl't!senting to the Social Security Administration "the reimbursable costs incurred by the hospital in order to fraudulently obtain Medicare funds," the U.S. Attorney's of- fice said Tuesday. Hansen owned the 99-bed Woodruff c.ommunity Hospital from 1966 to 1972. The in: dictments followed a 17-month federal grand jury in- vestigation, !he U.S. attorney said. "Don't ever get lnto a car "'"ith someone you d o n ' t know," her father, Henry Greenfield, !rtid in a warning for other children as the girl left UCLA Medi cal Cen ter Tuesday clutching a big toy stuffed dog. "Don't hitchhike," t II e Mission Hills father said. The girl said after she wa s found abandoned in Marina Del Rey last Friday that a man had given her $2 to help distribute advertising leaflets. Meanwhile, the c o u n t y Chlll·ch Says Boy's Death 'Extreme' BARSTOW (UPI\ -The death of II-year-old \Vesley Parker last week. after his parents threw away t h e diabetic youth's insulin supply, was deplored Tuesday by a spokesman for the Msemblles of God Churches1 in Southern California. The Re\'. \Yill i am H. Robertson. district superin- tendent or the sect. said .,.,,hile his church "believes in divine healing.'' ii does not "endorse or condone the throwing av.•ay of life·savin_g m e d i c a t i o n merely because the individual is presumed healed." Robertson said, "\Ve do not identi£y with those who tak'e extreme positions o( failing to follow a common sense way of life and would not feel that an extreme position in this re- gard brings any particular glory to God. nor doe! it re- flect to the credit of lhe church." Wtltwn lie MtW-Wll1'• Lllptt- 11,IOG ..... 111111 Slrif M~ 11 t111 lflrint llltol, Clim Clms"' lltlon Rl.f! ~ I >I . IW.M 8"1lNOI. '"1 ""°'* WIAWAlllO HO MO'tll.I rrtt .U AffW ,Of'. I S.IMfl II . ,!: ~ • ')~1 · I 11;1~11 1r11111 \ Iii( . '1 !\~ f~1/,,,#~~~~:;:~::·:-::::~ ~~~~~~~~~~-:------~~===~ \i Labor D_ay Weekend I I I I I r Saturday and Sunday 9 a.m. ·JO p.m., Monday 9 a.m.· 7:30 p.m. Featuring .eontinuous eountry West~rn Entertainment by: THE LARRY B00TH 81\ND ITOP RATED ARTISTS FOR CAPITOL RECORDS! " and THE BRUSH 1\RBeR 81\ND Free old fashioned hayrides every day for kids 4·12. ' IRECENTI.Y SEEN ON NBC'S ""MUSIC COUNTRY.') Fleet-footed frolickin' and fancy sleppin' (A square dance jamboree) J?LUS . ' Eye-poppi!l fireworks Saturday'n Sunday nights. IReR'BOIBl..E l.El\Plrq\eRIT'l'ERS -(NEW SHAMU FOR MAYOR SHOW) 001\TH DEFYING [)(')(JBL6 KITB FLY l\T 800 FEET (AIROEVIL JIM RUSING & THE SKY FOJQ SIDE ·SPUTIIN' M'Tle5 l\ND el\RRYIN' ElN CTHE AQUAMANIACS-WITH THE N;\llON'S HIGHEST HIGH DM:-84 FEEn M0ST IN<:?REDIBLE Flllrr EVER l?ERFElR/t\ED BY Ml\N l\NO l\NIMl\L, ITHE SHAMU RIDE JUMP! • 1\LL FE)R 0NB Lew PRleB 1\T SFAWORLD. MJSSIE)N 81\Y • S1\N DIEG0 , \ . 1' ·I ' I I \ ~ I I ' ' ' I t - 6 DAD,Y P ILOT EDITORIAL P AGE Rail Cros-sing Safety In the peaceful old Irvine Ranch days, trains chug- ging along the railroad tracks across the ranch did little more than shake up the oranges In adjacent groves. Now, however, the tracks intersect four major streets in the new city of Irvine -Iiarvard Avenue, Cul· ver Drive, Jeffrey Road and Sand Canyon Avenue. And the hazard t.o drivers increases along with the population of the young city. Since incorporation, there has been one train-car fatality when a bakery truck was struck at the Jeffrey Road crossing, and too many near misses. \Yarning signal s have been upgraded, but it js apparent that grade separations \Vill be the only eventual solution. Fortunately, the Public Utilities Com1nission has scheduled hearings in Los Angeles in October to deter· mine priorities for spending a $10 million California Highway Commission fund on grade separations in 1974. Irvine officials are preparing their bid for state funding of at least one such crossing. with Culver Drive in the top priority posi tion . The funding, and speedy construction of safe cr9ssings cannot come soon enough. Neglected Landmark One of the few remaining histo rical monuments in the Saddleback Valley, the Serrano Adobe, is not open to the public and seems sadly neglected. The 130-year·old home, built by Don Jose Serrano. holder of one of the first land-grant titles in southern California, stands smothered in flowering bushes and eucalyptus trees on an undeveloped corner of Lake Forest. vclopment Company, whose spokesmen say they plan to build a commercial park around the adobe ind de.di· cate an acre of land immediately surrounding it to tht county. • The charming old landmark needs care .. Not only does the adobe substance itself require attention, the vegetation around the building grows rapidly. The plumlr - ing is out of order, and mice and rats have made homes in neglected corners of the place. Reminders of the difficult and colo rful lives of our predecesso rs on California's rolling hills are few enough.' The adobe should be given more care and opened for all to see. A Happy Place The opening of the Laguna Nigue l Regional Park Sunda y set a mellow precedent fo r fu ture uses of the spacious 154-acre grounds. A pops concert and many amiable, relaxed family picnics were forerunners of happy days to come. T)J.e 45·acre Jake has not yet been filled, but winter rains and the Metropolitan Water District will take care of that. When the park opens on a daily basis in a few weeks, visitors will be able to enjoy four tennis courts, lighted for night play; pic ni c shade shelters and barbecue unit s; playing fjelds; a tot lot; and bicycle and equestrian trails. The real goa l of open space and ecology activities is to provide places where we all can recapture our psychological balance harmlessly in a natural setting. /' It is o\vned by Occidental Petroleum and Land De- Few things compare with the pleasure a good park offers: a picnic on sof t grass, watching a sunset, skip· ping stones. The Niguel Park offers just these simple joys and its creation is a credit to the public and private agencies whose smooth cooperation made it possible. SB 'You men behind me keep an1 eye out for bushwhackers/' Electronic 'Bugs' Could Backfire Dear Gloomy Gus To the Editor: Newport Beach Police Chief James Glavas ha3 proposed a citywide burglary alarm network via cable televisioo which . would link every home and business in this city directly to police headquarters. 1be chief poin.tid o~t that a variety of sensors could be 'iitstalled by private firms to signal illegal entry, fire, etc. He specifically stat~ that the police would inspect such installatjoos. I feel ii is im· perative t~jloU.t out to the citizens of Newport aCh (iJl1 these times of \Vatergate ibat•there; exists Ute potential for electr4:>nic eaVesdroPping at any time of the day or night directly by the police departmeiit. A LARGE variety of ••b ugging devices." could be a£fixed to such a syste.gl.1' surreptitiously and allow direct moni~ at police headquarters of any and aU.i· conversations in every single home a6d business in this entire city. I do oot suggest that the chief or aDJ.ODpJ~D our city government is remote· ly '~dering such application of this c:.i~i:ision alarm network : howeve r, the · ial exists. Times change, police ch~· come and go, and polit ical winds shift.1 Mass bugging of residences could be qpJ~mented at any time by political fiat. I 1 Ill AnomoN; I would like to call your at~on to the ~ents of southeast Asia in 1,967 when t~ Secretary of Defense Robert Strange McNamara announced the Oonstruction or a sophisticated elec- tronic surveillance-interdiction I i n e across the 17th parallel. Th e purpoie of tlis highly sophisticated electronic interdiction system (code name: Project M1,1ssel Shoals) \Vas to stop or, at least, markedly impede the now of men and material from North to South Vietnam. Portions of this electronic surveillance system bear similarities to the proposed burglar alann system pro- posed by Chief Glavas. Among the corn· ponents of this electronic line were seismic sensors '''hieh triggered land mines in response to the vibration of human footsteps, trucks, and vehicles but were capable of electronically rejecting the seismic vibration or the ubiquitous water buffalo. 'Ibis systenl \ras instalJed across the 17th parallel ;..., an estimated cost of well in excess of l\\Tl blllion dollars. In short order, the very unsophisticated North Vietnamese f(lund that they could very readily ride \~·atcr burfalo across the line. I would merely point out that no matter how sophisticated the sensor system or a burglar a:larm network is, professional criminals (even simple rice farmers on occasion) can find ways to avoid it. DONALD R. STEELE, M.D. l\'ia:GN'• Error To the Editor: The appointment of Henry Kissinger as secretary of State at this critical time may prove to be one of Nixon's greate:,:t urors.. It could well result ln serious dmnase to the people of Israel and to both tbc Jews and gentiles of the United Stat ... W1'1'11 1'11E A!DolemS c:ottfiscatlto8 many American oll prodUCerS. swimming tn oil which Ibey mlgh l eoslly withhold from the d<spenlte \\'est•m powers and .. loaded wit1t gold tbal they are hard- pttSied lo nnd ways Io spend It, a 111edlator Is needed who Is acceptable to both lidos. lmqlne our appoinllng aome Dr. Mollamm<d lbn S.ud u SOcretarY and oeMlrtC him lo Jerusalem to flllOlllle rib Golda Meir and General 0.7an •• , the imams from bolh l$J'ael Ind Ametla would reach high heaven. t<....,... Is probably the l110$t com- MAILBOX Letters from readers are 1velcome. Normally writers s1toul(i C011Vty their 1nessages in 300 words or less. The right ta condense letters to fit spa.ce or eliminate libel is reserved. All letters must include signature and maiti1ig address, but names may be withheld on request if sufficient reason is apparent. Poetry will not be published. · pelent of American diplomats, but more than brilliance is required to solve the Arab-Israel problem. The mediator must be personally acceptable to both. ShouJd Kissinger fail in his attempt at mediation while American cars stand immobile, houses are cold and peciple cannot reach the ir jobs. a st rong reaction against both the Ad1ninsitralion and Kissinger could occur, Lnaking the Jatter the vlctint of an in1possible situation . RECOGNIZING its diplpmaLic ad- vantages we sent Irish ambassadors 10 Dublin, Jewish to Jerusalem and Italian to Rome, all with good effect. Are we now reversing this proven policy by ap- pointing men of antagonistic background? \Viii son1ebody please print a hard- lcrget-<>f[ but easy-to-apply bumper sticker that says "PARKING SLOB" so I can quickly affix it to cars that clog driveways to laun- dromats, markets and the like where the rest of us citizens use the proper parking slots? I'll buy a dozen! J.M. Gloomy Gus comme11ts ire 111bmlllff by re1d1rJ Ind do 1101 11«1HU•ill' rt!Ject t~e view• of II•• new101per. ser>d yovr "' •"v• to Gloomy Gu1, D1f1Y Pilot. Good News For Ailing Globetrotters ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ The happiest news for world travelers since the invention of Dramamine was reported recenlly by the World Medi cal Association, which is distributing a pocket·size guide to English·speaking doctors in more than 70 countries around the v.·orld. FRANK KLOCK This International Medical Directory A uto T!lrflHH!I To the Editor : Sooner or later. the tyranny or "automobile consciousness" must cease: Surely you are aware of the obviously negative effects o~ our attachment to the motor car. In the face of this chaos, there really is only one thing to say: No. NO TO MORE !\.IETERS, no to more monies made Crom meters, no to more parking spaces, no to any building (however "tasteful") to house more un- necessary automobiles. Before we can talk about "solutions" to our problems or urbanization. we must say no to the patenUy obvious patterns of our own self.cfestn.iction. JEREMIAH BOWDEN llnstflble IJfflH To the Editor : Poor Ronald Ziegler. Now, he has the hazard of bodily harm added to the other humiliating burden s of serving as devoted slave and court fool to a presi~ dent who appears -to be confu.~ing himself with one of the testier early EngLish kings. ASIDE FROM what llllppens to Mr. Ziegler and his pride -or Jack of it - this country just cannot afford to keep such an unstable man as Rlchard Nixon in office. and the sooner we recognize it the better. Since he will never let go his cro1111 and sceptre voluntarily, the only answer is to grasp the nettle and im· peach him. MARGARET NOLEN .---1111 f;e orge ---, \'.'ill be more help to Americans than to anybody else. since we are notoriously !he \l'Orst linguists since !he Tasmani:i•1s faded from sight. An Ame1 ican abroad can scarcely ask a \\•alter for a glass of \.'l<iter, much Jess describe an abdominal pain or an allergy to penicillin to· a foreign doctor. The problem is made doubly acute by the melancholy fact that foreign •: )Ctors, in my biased opinion, are generall y in- ferior to the American breed . Diagnostically and technically speaking, we turn out the most proficient medical men (if not women) in the world. NOT ONLY DO our standards see m to be higher, but we are relatively free from the medical paranoia that is rampant in so many other countries. The French, for instance, are, still obsessed with ''liver"': ~!most any complaint you have that can't be easily diagnosed is relegated to the liver in France. When 1 suffered a nasty case or sunstroke at Cannes some years ago, two doctors solemnly assured me it was a liver malaise. "No, no." I insisted, "C'est le coup de soleil." They both laughed nastil y: everyone knows that mad d o g s , Englishmen, and American touri sls always go out in the mid.-day heat and are impervious to sunstroke. lt v.·as 24 hours before l could get them to stop treating me for 1n:\lndll! de fole. Without my rudim<'ntary French. it might havl.! been a v.·eek. Dear C'.corge: When you were young did you think you had to always make passes at girls to be "with it" and EVERY COUNTRY seems to have its favorite ailment, 11.S a sort or grab bag into which its doctors throw any mysterious, ob:,:curc. or unusual syn· drornes. The art of the differential diagnosis has been brought to such 11 high level in the U.S. that we have become spoiled and forget how casually bit-or· ' miss . a doctor can diagnose us in ~tAclagasoar or Morocco . There is really noUilng wor-se lhan a mOO!cal emergency when you are in o foreign country; your xenophllla quickly flies out the window, and all your old chauvinistic feelings come back 1hrougb the door. surrountkd by :seven or Europe's most noted specialists, you sti ll wish that Marcus Welby would .stride Into the: room and s-1raigbten them all oul. PopWar? Cl.ARA Dear Clara: Aclually. r ucvcr cared much •bout being popular. I just did oil that because 1 lik< girls (!low did you find out. anyhow"?) Bmats, Planes Aid S11augglers New Drug Traffic Tricks WASmNGTON -The government's war against drug smuggling, trumpeted as one of the major domestic successes of the. Nixon Administration, Is losing 0the battle to fleets or .small private planes and fast boats. Classified documents from t h e Customs Bureau made avai lable to us demonstrate the ex- tent of the govern· ment's failure. They flatly state that the na rcotics agents can· not compete "'itb the ingenuity or the smugglers. . The dope nmnerl have organized the m o s t important small boat operation since the evacuation of Dunkirk and the government's frag- mented narcotics forces are unable to tope with them . "WE i\1UST undertake a program to provide Customs control of smaU boat traffic entering the Uni ted States," one of the documents asserts. "Smuggling of narcotlc drugs by small boats is a se riou s problem. At present, we have no means of effecting interdiction of drugs entering the Uni ted States by this means." The high flying dope peddlers operate v.•ith equal freedom, hauling their cargo or white powder from Mexico and Canada wilh virtually no opposilion. "Smuggling by means of private aircraft ha s grown in a situation Where control of th.is commerce, for technical reasons, was ."oot possible," t he documents said. , (JACK ANDERSON) In short, the situation is so out of hand that i\fafia and free·lance traffickers have virtual carte blanche to haul their v.·ares across the United States borders. FEDERAL antinarcotics officials have made elaborate plans to increase the ir efficiency in the air and on the water, but budget conscious bureaucrats have t'Ut out this capability. For th is fiscal year alone, the Office of. Management and Budget has sliced the Customs budget for these plans from $11.4 million to $3.3 millioo. This penny-wise policy is preventing narcotics agents from acquiring sophis· licated tools, including aircraft with special tracking equipment. boats fast enough to catch smugglers' craft and· sensors to seek out the dope runners. The drug fighters are using some elec· tronic sensors borrowed from the military, but find them virtually worth· less. "To date, sensors available fo r boat survei llance have been rudimentary in nature," one Customs report states. "This situation exists because of the lac k of developmental funding and technical capability that has existed for years withlli the Customs Agency Service." THE HEAVILY publicized seizures of millions ol dollars worth of t.arcotics are largely the Work of old·fashioned customs and narcotics agents at ports or else\vhere, based on leads from painstak· ingly nurtured informants. Arrests or smugglers through random checks or sn1alt planes or boats have been few and infrequent. P(esently. the air-sea fi,Bht again st drugs is badly fragrnented betwec.n (,'usloms at the Treasury Department and the new Drug Enforcemen t Administration (DEA) at the Justice Department. A memorandum describing a meeting last month between Customs' air intrusion coordlnators and George Brosan, a top Customs enforcement al· ficial, makes clear that neither agency knows what the other is doing. THERE ARE about 50 planes Q! various kinds available at any ooe time to the '"'O agencies for air and boat surveillance. But \llilhout cooperation between them through use of informers \\"ho signal the departure of a shipmeot from some :onely harbor or airport, the planes are use less. They cannot "picket· line" the entire border. DEA. which may wind up with the whole program eventually, is too busy reo rganizing to take on any new duties, particularly ones as complicated as the "Air Intrusion" operation. The overall mess is best summed up by Brosan: "Both the Drug En f orcement Administration and the Immigration and Naturalization Service have token pro. grams. Neither can compare with tbe present Customs effort. and possibly some thought ought to be given to com· bining tbe three programs." ·· Safety, But Not Tyranny -• I Every Jaw-abiding citizen has.a right lo feel safe in his borne, and his person - whether on the street, ill the park or in his car. And, he has a right to expect that his government provide that safety. But last year there were more than 800,000 felony crimes in California . The crime rate Ms in- creased nearly 200 percent in the past , JO years. Crime is the number one pub- lic concern. Because of lhat in September. I 9 7 2. Gov. Reaga n named 1 five-member Select Committee on Law Enforcement Problems and charged lt to develop recommendations on how best to fight crlme. After JO months of digging into the prob+ lcm. the task force has issued ils 184· page rt~port. It contains a wide range of :;ignificnnt and far-reaching recom· mendations: -CREATION of a Public Safety Agen· cy to consoUdate state law enfom!mcnt functions (highway palrol, prisons, emergency services. etc.): -Establish the state policy that criminals who use r1ttarm.s during a crime must go to prison, without chance or probation: -Prison should be the general rule. rather than the exception, for convicted narcotics peddlers. Conviction f o r pos$C$Sion or sale of heroin abould bring mandatorY imprisollmenl with lltile hope or proballon ; -11 should be a misdemeanor, without exccplion, for a person to drive• vehicle \Yhen his blood alcohol content is 0.10 percent or higher, and ~ti should be tbe official stAtewldc -------------. not so much with the rule as with tbosi ( ) · judges who twist It to coddle tbl RUS WALTON criminal. I The ·solution is not to remove that i~ ._ __________ _, portant cltl!en potection; the solution II to eatabUsh firm parameters wlthl and local Emergency Telephone Number which the rule of exclusion can be all in case or crime, fire or accident. plied. 1 POINTING to the need for criminal justice that is swift, certain and strong'-- but that it is now slow. uncertain and In· effectual -lhe Task Force urged reforms {o lnsure speedy trials: -Reclassify minor traffic violations and shift them from the courts to in· formal summary procedures; ~ivc prio rity to cases involving opiates and dangerous drugs ; -Permit six-member juries for misde- meanors and feloriles not punishable by life imprisonment or death and -Authorize verdicts by a five-sixth jury majority, except for capital punish- ment. and -Dispose cf cases in favor of the defendant unle5s the matter goes to trial within 60 days. ~ In the area of prison terms ,,and cor- rccUonal institutions. the Task Force urged that the state's ill-conctlved pro- bation subsidy program be cnncelled. The committee also tlrged that work be made mandatorY for all prlsoli lnmtttes , except where 50l'Urlty requlremenls make It Impossible. 'DIE MOST controvtmal reeom• mendatlon calls for the abolition of the so-called exclusionary rule. That rule holds lllllt evidence obtAlned through II· !cpl search and sel%ure. II lnadllllaible In court. True, the rule or exclusion Is often used • to thwart justice. But. the problem rests ' ' I It is indeed, the first and foremost dul,f of government to protect us from thost \Vho would prey upori us. Thot 's whal government is all tlbout. But , we muf!\ take care lest the crimes of the felon are replaced by the tyranny of governmcn~ Such a trade is not necessary. And, in th pursuit' of justice, it \VOU!d be o dubious merit. i OIAtt•I COAST DAILY PI LOT Robert N.; Weed, PublUhtr Thomai Xeevil. Editor Barbara Kreiblch Editorlol Poge liditor The. ~dltor1•1 ,.J){tgO Of 1M: Dtily 1 Pilot Jlttk~ to lnlonn and rUmula1t ttadt:rs by presentlrw on thl1 Jiilie divtrse•commentaey"on topics Of~ tet111t by O"Mlcet&d columnists and cartoonia:tt, by provldlna a. rOrum. t\)!' mdm' views and by prtaenttnc tttls ntwspaper't oplnlont Md Ideas en cumnf topk1. The editoriil.opfnk>nl ot the Doil>' Piiot ........ oolt In the tdllarial c:olumn 1t the '°I> of lbt j paff. Oplnkmi e:xprftlllled by the ed. umnisti and ~ista and letter .writtn are M-O't!'n and llO ~ tncnL ot fhelt vi~..., !If the DaU1 • Piiot -be lnl.....,S. ; Wednesday, August 29, 1978 • ! 11 1 1 ' r 'I r 1 Runtingion :._e~eb. Fountain ·Valley- , ED-'F l N --~- * * * VOL. 66, NO. 241,, 7 SECTIONS, 88 PAGES ORANG{ COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • • WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1973 • Today'sF~ N.Y. Steeks TEN CENTS Five Hurt as LA-hound Jet Jolted Ill Flight WS ANGELES (AP) -Five wo111<11 were injuted, one critically with a broken neck, when a Trans World Airlines Boeil)g 707 was jolted as it approached Los Angeles lntemaijonal Airpofl. TWA sad the mishap Tu<sday night wa!I ·cauaed by n:iechanlcal failure or air turt>ulence. An investigation is under way., A passenger, Ann Clemente of San Diego, said ~'for a minute, it felt like we were .4t the P/'Qmlsed Land. "'!)ere were people behind me pr.aying. We were Oying through the air,,. We were bounced around quite a bit.";/ The women, inclu'ding two stewardesses, were standing up w})eh the plane ahook. TWA said, ,-' Marge Payette of Huntll!gton 'Beach, was in critical condition.-w1lh a broken n~ at Centinela V,alley community Hospital. / Two others ~ hospi!aUzed with lesser injuries. JbeY were identified 8i' Ellen Hargitay; 311 of I.Gs Angeles, with a sprained ,Jwid and a possible back in- , ' ' •• $600,000 to Huntington ··Funding Okayed ":For Meadowlark Grljltlng tbe largest chunk of federal revenue:sbaring fWlds yet given to any ·otange County community, COunty Board o! Supervisors Tlleaday gave !'00,00I to lJuntlngton Beach for \lie pur:~ pi W•lut Goll eoune, The sum 'alsb Will he1p lluy a' wnplllg area adjacent to the tre&<lo!\l!I. IS.hole course near Meado larlt ~, .•:l'be• onlf !P.:"'t -.... mm. !lggtooL Badl 1 durinl tlil board of llU~ 1110catlao -'lwcl6y •as ~.ooo wmartec1 !Or Lde'Pllttn-ua Partt In Fullertoa. ' The county Harbors, Belches and Parts Commlallon had r~ '1'0.000 be alloltd to Hlllltlngtoo Beach tit the golf coune purchaae. Huntlllgtoo Beech City Administrator Dovld. Rowlands .. id the city has unUI Sept. 23 to develop a plan to purchaae the 110-aore parcel, He told supervisors !he dty will Ille some ol Jl! own revenue-sharing funds and ts considering !sluing revenue bonds. baaed oo projected receipts of 'the popular golf coune. Property owners had been approached by houliDg developers, but gave the city tbe opllon o! obtaining the Meadowlark facility IS a public' re<reaUon area. liowlands sal~ 100,000 people -uae the Cabin Cruiser , Blown to ·Bits ' . -Off Seal Bea,ch A 29-foot cabin cruiser exploded in Oimes Tueldly three miles offshore ,f):Om Seal Beach, but the Huntington Beach owner o! the boat was able to dive ..V.rboard unharmed. ~Seal Beach Jifeguards rescued James ,Smith, 45, who ll-ln tbe Homtington By the 'Sea Trailer Plll'k on Pacific Coaat l!Jf'J:.:a ~tyard operator In U.:. ~. was the ooly person on hoard his al<el-hulled crulaer, He told llleguarda be wu taking It on a shakedown crulae after refUrbishing It and rebulJding tbe ,ei\llnea. '1 ,' 0 lle stopped to check trouble with tbe ileeTinJI mechanism, when he heard a oiuffled explosion,. lifeguard& reporL Smith peered into tbe engine rooms, Jlalnes shot up from tbe bilge, and he 'Abbed a Ule preserver and Jumped. ·~Ith wBJ not hurt, but hl1 bolt was deitroyed/except !or tbe hllll. Uleguarda • ..ia, The loss waa eatimated at '9,000, 'tnveaUptors said. 'rhe Or1111e eounty Harbor Patrol and. :i11e Coast Guard douaed the Oa!llM, then ~ tbe humed boat bacl: to Long 'Web Marini. ,. • ,. Lii arda think a gas 'laek mllbl have the explooioll. Smith had atopped ........ then tried to l'Hllll II. • .-- golf course each year and that one-third of it is an important archeological site. He also agreed that pa!I of the courae cOuld be· uaed for bicycle trails. Other prqjects approved, as recom-piepc!Od hy the county Harbors, Beachea ind Parb Commlaslon, inducie !200,IOO for the Fountain Valley RecreaUon Center. ~ alloted waa $100,000 tor ~·· MU Beach;ifl00,000 for I ,Yiew park in Corona del Mar and ~,oot lot I wharf park la, Newport ~ 500 Perish In Mexico Earthquake MEXICO CITY (UPI) -The death toll in Tuesday's earthquake mounted steadi- ly today, and by dawn the Mexican presidency was reporting "about 500 dead." One Mexico City newspaper put the toll al 121. The Mexico City dally El Heraldo said &00 died. other COWlta ran between 400 and 600. At least 2,000 persons were reported in- jured and tena of thousanda left bomeles,,, As da"11 broke, survivors dug through the Nino of .tbelr homes. The dead were. laid out In private homes, local hospitals and blankets under the streets. some were still under the debris. The death toll rose as reports came in from outlying villages and crews oon· Unued to clear the wreckage. Rain ripped the area Tueaday night hut cleared •by .dawn. Reildents took little noUce of IL In the quake-stricken area surrounding the 18,700.foot Orizaba volcano, debris stoed still scattered on the streets of 1tveral large towns and a multitude of viUages. Ambulances ran from the Orizaba Valley, Ciudad Serdan and other heavily· hit areas to hospitals in nearby state capitals. Traffic in the area was packed with volunteer cars carrying the Red Cross banner. At tbe town hall in Orizaba officials were coordinating reports from ouUying villages. 'I1iose who Jost their homes stood in line outside the building waiting to report the losses. Waverly Person o! the National Earth-· quake lnlonnatlon Center in Boulder, COio,, said' the quake aweared to be tbe wtll'it in Mexico's modern history in terli>s of loss of life, The early morning quake, centered in foult lines deep under Mexico's moun- tainous central apine, regtalered 7 on the Richter Scale -more powerful than the December quake ID Monagtia, Nicaragua that killed 5,000 pe_,., The Managua quake had a Rldtler 'llteoslty or f.2. DELINQUENT TAX ·YUST PUBLISHED • • Hardest hit Jn Tueaday's quake J'U the loim of Orizaba, caught in the etlicenter _ of the giant temblor, · The deadline for ·property t a x )111ments hai come and g9110 and hun· drtdl ol Orange coast property owners blvt yet to pay the piper, Orange COunly 'rax Collector Robert Citron'• llst oLdelinQueJ)t taxpayers ap-=on Pages ze and rt of tod1y's Jloily I I ,, ' A three-story apartment bull~ the community of i!0,000 persons ·150 mllea eaat-40\Jtheast of Mexico City collapaed, klllinJ more than 100 tenants asleep in- skte. Mexican President Luis Echeverria was en routa today to the devastated ione around Orizaba. Thousand were left without bomea. Red (!el QUAKE, P ... I) I • jury, and Te-sun Hse, 16, of Taiwan, with a broken jaw and a possible fractured skull. The stewardesses were treated at the hospitaJ and released. '11ley were iden- tified as Ellen Chapiro, 21, of Honolulu, and Betty Gray, 30, of Steamboat Springs, COio. llospltal spokesm'!ll said both sUffered lower back injuries. United Press International quoted one passenger saying there was a lot of "praying out loud." "Pfople were touching the celling and coming down," said John Adams Qf Norton, Mass. "It was really chaos." "A couple of people fell very badly. The people who were not in their seats, they were the ones who got hurt ." Adams said there was oo warning to fasten seat belts. . He added there was "no panic." The spokeaman aaid a miUtary doctor traveling on flight 742 frOJn Hong ,KOng via Okinawa, T.iiwan, G~ and Honolulu aided tbe injw:ed before the jetliner lan\l.ed. A Glim Reminder Huntington Beach Police Deparbnent,Cadet James Ackerman.and city employe Dan Hall paint bicycle on pavement at Edinger Avenue and Bolsa Chica 'Street. Emblem marks spot vihere boy, 13, wa;i hurt in accident while' bike-riding on wrong side of roadway, Silhouettes Will ~ painted d . all bike accident sites as reminder and warniJ!g" Bicycle m1snap iniunes have drqpped four percent since departnl~t started its safety program, : • ". 1 , ' . ' . ' State Might Acquire Defunct Freeway Land By JOHN ZALLER Of tM D111Y .-lktt Stiff A state parks official said Tuesday his department might acquire about 25 acres of..ei-Pacific Coast Freeway Jarid if isn't needed for a tranap0!18Uon corridor, The land lying between the Pacific Coast Highway and Huntington Stale Park probably would be used to enlarge the park. The land in question stretches from the Santa Ana River to Beach Boulevard. Hannon Rowe, supervisor of ac- quisition and disposal for the state Parka and Recreation Department made the remarks lo Santa Ana at a meeting of the state Commission on Government Organization and Economy. The Little Hoover Commission, as the state panel is commonly known, is in· vestlgating disposal of excess state-Own· ed lapda. . Hif the land is not needed for some COUCH, CHAIR DRAW RESPONSE Success stories are not as rare as you mlgbt think .Look at this one: * 6' COUCH & matching chair, Gold ~ white. Almost 'new. $50. (Plione No.) This Dally Pilot advcrtlaer had IS calls the first nlghtl The i tem was sold, ol course_, and another success story was written. Our Ad·vlsor can ·help you write your own success story. Dial hei:..dire<:t- 642-1678. I kind of transportation purpose," Rowe told members of the commis.sion, "we would definitely be inte~ in it." The Little Hoover ~lS'on had asked for the meeting to clieCi. on tbe status of stale-owned land along the freeway right-of-way now, tliat ' tbe Pacific Coast Freeway ls officially deleted, It was aJso reported at the meeting that. in Newpo!I Beach. the first 21 parcels of land bought for tbe freeway will be auctioned off "as soon as the paperwork can be prepared." The first two pari:els will go up for sale Nov. 6. The property, mainly single family homes on Kings Road overlooking Pacific Coast Highway, is valued at about 110 million. They were purchaaed between 196.l and 1971 at a cost to the state of about $6,4 million, The land considered surplus in Hun- tington Beach ls fn>m the old ,Pacific Electric Railroad i'lgbt-ot-way, It was purchased In 1964 for about $847,000. First priority for the land is still lra,nopo!latlon, Ro~ aaid: . "The county ii. condutting a transportation stuc13' to see what land ill surplus and wha.t land wlll sUJl be needed to solve transportation problems along the coast," Rowe said. "!! they decide they don't need the land we would certainly be very ill· terested in lt." / He noted that Hontlngton State Park currenUy owos land only up •to the fence boundary, ' 11 additional property were acquired It proba~ly would be.wed for parking, 0But t can't be sure," Rowe said after the meeting. "There would have to be detailed studiea before I could 18f." There were 132 passengers and nine crew members aboard lhe flight , scheduled to terminate in San Francisco. ·Passengers were sent to San Francisco aboard other planes. TWA spokesman Mike Leon said the cause o.f the accident . "could have been one of two things -clear air turbulence or a mechanical malfunction ln parts of the tall, "The captain seemed to indicate there was a malfunction of the trim tab or elevator control. As yet, we have not con· Nixon Gets Five Days For Appeal WASl!JNGTON. (AP) -The Watergate trial' judge , this afternoon ordered Presi· dent Nixon to turn over for the judge's private inspection-tapes subpoenaed by the Watergate prosecutor, but stayed the order'for five days to pennil appeal U,S. District Court Jud~e Jqbn ,J. aald ilia~~ to')>;• " 1!1111 NucO!I ' ust ''lit'tiilUPe ortbWith ioi/, tile diar!'f' eaamhlati<!n. 'In eamn". die tape ~ o( 'N!iw!I'• CGIMl'latlons with by-~tbd Ill the. Watergate IDvestJP.UOrl: · !Ii-ordered the fi~.'!l' ·e'14· '-"ed lhat,lit Would extend t!)e ataJ '~Y · ll ~';i:i!mpleUon. of appeal! teqalrh It. !lib's order was '"" flnl ttnie'ill ~ ihat • judge ~ ~ a P'ieidaent to produce materlah over bi• objeCuons, Niaon hai Claimed )lia1 ito discloae tbe documents and tap6 would vlolata the confidentiality of I h-e presidency. Sirlca called his cour8e a middle ground between the twp oonQlcting claims of tbe President and ol the Watergate prosecu tors, who want to ex· amine the tapes in their investiJation of the Watergate affair, ' , ' . He aatd that without discrediting the strength of the Watergata grand jury's claim ·to, the inlormaticio ·he coWd riot .. as matters now stand, rule that the present claim or privilege is invalid." ! lns!ead, Sirica said' tn a Z3-page i>piniOn which accompanied .J>is , order lot· the tapes, "the court has attempted to ·wil!k the middle ground between I ~ to decide the question of privilege at olie , extreme, and a wholeaale delivery ol tapes to the grand jury.at the olher."1 Sirlca put his dilemma· plalnly"-"The court ls~impty unable to.decide lhe.ques- tion of privilege without inspecting th, tapes,'' Sirica said that If privileged and un· privileged material are intemungled, only unprivileged material.may be taken out and transmitted to the grand jury. On the other band, be continued, "if privileged and unprivileged evidence are so inextricably connected that separa- tion becomes impossible, tbe whole must he privileged and no disclosure made to tbe grand jury,'' If it Is awarent that the tapes .are Ir- relevant to the investigation, "or that for state reasons they ainnot he intro- duced into the caae, tbe suhjloena • , • WOuld be useleS8," he sai<L Only 1 Candid'ate For Board Post Fountain Valley resident Karen Ackley is the first and so Jar the Ollly candidate to file for the elementary disttict S<hool hosrd seat vacated by tbe resignation of trustee Mary Hix. A spokesman for , !lie Orange Cllunty Registrar of Voters said Mrs. Ackley is the only peraon to have filed fa< tbe special Nov. electloo. Filing deadline Is Sept. 7 for hopeful candidates, Mrs. Ackley Is a former presldentCof the McDowell Pl'O and currenUy l!O"(es as president of. the dlslrk:t's Su~ tendenl·Parent Council , Mn, Hix resigned from the Fountain Valley Sdiilol District board of trusties last month to move to Pbl\ldelpbia. '. French Silent Still I PAPEE'l'E, Tahiti (UP!) -French!of· fieials maintalned lllence today on ljew Zealand and Australian reports that France aet off tbe Dfth In Ila JIOl>- troveralal li'13 nuclear blast terles in lhe Pacific. firmed that There was no visible damage to the plane. They've got the plane in a hangar and our peoplt. are still going over it" The trim tab and elevator control keep the aircraft level when it climbs or descends. The pilot, J. W. Harpster of San Fran- cisco, reported the jetliner experienced "a violent shaking for a few seconds" · while it was descending from its cruising altitude of 33,000 feet and still some 25 miJJutes out at sea. Nixon Takes Free way Trip President Nixon went for another drive on the California freeways, accompanied by his wife, Pat, and daughter, Tricia Nixon Cox. Escorted by two Secret Service cars, the Nixons stopped Tuesday for an hour at Red Beach inside the Camp Pendleton Marine base. The Western White House did not announce the President's excursion until the Ni.J.ons had arrived at the beach. A news media car that attempted to follow t~ found its path blocked by the Secret Service. "There are certain t1mee when the Prtside!11 wanta to bO private," leputy P!'t$11 1e<:ret;ari Gerald L. Wamn told reporters, . Rape Victim's ' -H usband-·t>ffers ' Arrest Reward The husband of the latest victim ol· what Huntington -Beach police call the 1'.Downtown Rapist" today put up a $2,000 reward for information leading to the ar- rest and conviction of the criminal. Del. Fred Loya aaid police believe the latest atta,k. which took place Tueaday as the woman slept in her home, is ooe more in a chain Of nearly 10 attacks dating back about two years. The latest victim was beaten by ber at- tacker when she tried to reslat him, of- ficers s:aid. The housewife was home alone with her two children at the time of the 3 un. attack, police said. AU of the rapes tllat police heUeve have, been comniltted hy the Downtown Rapist follow a pattern. All the victims have been sleeping in their homes in tbe downtown area and are either borne alone or with just their children, who are also asleep, Plot Inves tigated SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Two police officers arJ'! in New Orleans checking 15 persons arrested in lbe investigation of an assassination plot again.rt President Nixon fo r poasible links with a 1971 police stlltlon ambush here, Lt: Charles Ellis Said Tuesday. I Orange Coast Weather The sun will peek through those low clouds Thursday morning leav· ing the res~o! the day fairly sunny. Highs will range from 70 at the beaches to 75 Inland. OverniJht lows 63-65. INSIDE T,OU;\ \' It W<11 a gay 01/'f in N•1JJ York -even though they lost miser- ably. The h°"'osexual commu· J1ity plcyed tJle police dtpart. ment in a frlt11dly baseball 00""' to better tleir image. Story ?age 7. ( AtY_,......_ I l,11111L...... a L.,M, .... • lf ~lllltl • lMHllt • Mo'riH M-U C•N,.l'lllt s.n M.1 1•1 ..... tt ,..,_ ~ 1t MatltRtl 1+tWt 4 C1ll~•lf1Mi ~ O?ll"lt C•lltr 14 C9Mla • '"'"' tJ.lt c;.o..a... 211 Df, SMMK,... M Dfi•lli.Motlttl 14 StKll Mlrflth U.U IE•,.._iP... • l..._W. M 1"*1al""""' M-1' ,,_,.,, ,.... ,~ n..n • ....., • .... ... ...... 14 ....... "'"" ..... .................. 4 ) ' -, • • ' • : • -----.. 2 uAIL v PILO_, ___ _;_H ____ w_.,_,._ ... c.,c_' -•-'U9'-'-"_2'l_;.' _1_91_3 Trip C11 t Short Agnew Dail hter Life Threatened \llASHJNGTON (UPI ) -Vire Presi- dent Spiro T. Agnew's daughter Susan cul short a voyage on the hospital ship LJSS Jiope be cause of threats on her life made in Braz.ii, nn A~new spokesman said today. l\1arsh Thomson, the vice president's press secretary, said the famil y made ''a judg1nent ... not to take any further risks" and arranged to have the 26-year· old ~1iss Agnew :eturn to \Yashlngton. ~1iss Agnew, who sailed aboard the Hope in February with the intention of returning in December . worked with audio-visual education equipment. "There had been threats on her life down there (Brazil) and although the Brazilians thought they could take care of the situation and the vice president has expressed confidence in the ability of the Brazilian government to provide necessary security, as a father he "'anted to take the prudent measure of bringing her closer to home," Thomson said. The '\fashington Star-News reported to- day that Or. William Walsh, who founded Project I-lope under which the ship sails on hwnanitarian missions, said both he and Miss Agnew received several threats -including one last week th at could not be ignored. "Th.is was a threat which we felt was more serious and American intelligence agreed with Brarilian intelligence,'' 'Valsh told the Star-News. "The Brazilians felt she was worth a great deal in ransom in exchange for polilical prisoners and their responsibility was greater than ours," said \Valsh. r..liss Agnew told the Star-News that her return had nothing to do with the in· Library Aids Readers With Poor Eyesight Special books and equipment are available at the Huntington Beach Public Library to help the partially sighted use the library's resources. There are more than SOO volumes of fiction and non-fidloo works available in large pr i n t. for easy visibility. The library also receives a weekly edition of the New York Times. and also a special edition of Readers Digest in large print. In the audio visual department, three master lens magnifiers (a large magni· fying glass mounted on a small stand with a special light) are available for checkout up to two weeks at a time . The library also ha s one expensive op- tiscope which enlarges printed materials on a small screen. The optisC'ope is available only to institutions. For information on aids for the partially sighted. phone Mrs. Sarah Glas, head of the audio visual department, at 536-5484. Murder Attempt Cl1arg e Dropped Charges of attempted m u r d e r originally sought against a Huntington Beach man have been dropped for Jack of evidence, police reported today. Ramey Ray Stroud, 26, of 15672 Swan Lane was booked by Huntington Beach police Aug. 14 in connection with the shooting or Donald Joseph Beaulieu, 39, of 6200 Edinger Ave. The shooting took place in Stroud's home when Beaulieu was visiting Stroud·s 25-ycar-old \\'ife Sallie rt.fargaret. Beaulie suffered a shoulder \\'ound in lhc in- cident . Delecti ves said the District Attorney refused lo file a complaint against Stroud because of insufficient evidence for pros- ecution. ORAN•I COAST HI DAILY PILOT T~I Or1n91 (HIT OAILV PILOT wlll'I """k.11 It comblr'lld !flt Nt~Prtn, Is llllbU"'ea by ~ Or1n91 Co.11 Publl111.ng (Dm1Nnr , S.IN· rttt ..tltlon1 1r1 P<1t>ll111t<;1, M~IV lllr0\111111 Jl'rld1r. tor c os11 Me111, N-POrt lle1eh, Hlll'H"91on ll~•tlllfl'ounl••n v11u..,, L11gunt llttcl!, lrvlnf/S..sd~l>Ac~ Ind S&n Clem1nTtl Sen Jutn C111l1tr1no. A 1ingl1 •ti!~tt fldillon It puobll1Md S.ll.lnilVI Ind Sund-r1. fht prlnc:lpal putoll"'lng pl1ftt !1 ti 3JO Wtll tty Strttr. C0111 1.11.,,, c1morn11, tM?t. ' Rob11t N. W11d Prn'ld..,I Ind P..OIW.t r J1cl1 l . C111l1y VICt ,.rlllciffll tnd Genetti M1 n19 ... Th-•• K11•il lchw Tho1t111 A. M 11rphin1 M•,,..1113 [llllol Ch1tlH H. loe1 Rich1rd "· Ni ll Aullllftf M-.'"9 Ell10r1 THtY C1..fll1 WK! Or .. C-1r Edf!Or H ...... f•IHc•OMc. 11171 .. 1ch lo11l1•1rd M1lli11f .... .,,.,,i r.o\ ••• 1to, ,,,., °"'"' Ofllooo I.It""" IHdl~ m "°'"' A-'°'" Maa1 nt WW l•f Str"' Hl'W'llO" 11..cflz all»J fllllll1*1 llow1 ... 1'11 .. ,...CllmMtl! 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Judge Vincent excused the panel late Tuesday after deputy public defender Ron Butler completed his case in answer to charges of murder, rape and kidnap. Butler and prosecutor Robert Chat· lerton said they will deliver final arguments to the jury Thursday after brief rebuttal testimony from further witnesses. Wallace, 26, denied from the witness stand that he raped and strangled cocktail waitress Nanette Post, 'll, of Fountain Valley last Feb. 9. The veteran of ty,·o Vietnam tours told the jury he was "nowhere near" the Huntington Beach area in the hours before l\1rs. Post's nude body was discovered. Wallace told the jury that he suffered a memory lapse five days earlier when he allegedly kidnaped South Laguna X-ray technician Carole Ann Rowao. Miss Rowan. 24, told the jury she was responding to an emergency call from a San Clemente hospital when Wallace ordered her to halt her car near the beach cities offramp of the San Diego Freeway. She said Wallace, who worked as a part time security guard for the Mission Viejo Company and Fountain Valley Plaza, ordered her at gunpoint lo put handcuffs On her wrists. Miss Rowan said she struggled with Wallace to the. point that the l\farine sergeant pulled over to the side of the freeway and she was able to leap from his car. Wallace testifie·~ that hi~ memory went blank from the time he was questioning a woman trespasser in the Mission Viejo area to a few hours later ""hen he rcaliz· ed that Miss Rowan was riding with him in his car. Tliree Astronauts Experimenting Aboard Skylab HOUSTON (UPI) -The Skylab 2 asttonauts today showed how a space bathroom works, took pictures over Paraguay that may help mapping of remote areas, and tested the effects of loog space missions on man's ability to navigate by the stars. Alan L. ·aean, O"'·en K. Garriott and Jack R. Lousma chatled cheerfully with flight controllers as they also monitored the sun with cameras and tel escopes and took photos of a developing .. tropical storm in the mid-Atlantic. Jn television pictures beamed back to earth. Lousma floated about the living area of his three-bedroom space house. sholving how lood is stored , how the crew climbs into their sleeping bags in separate bedrooms and how lhe orbital ' ' w a st e management compartment" operates. "Like dOY.'n on the farm , \\'e have a one-boler." the space rookie saKI, point- ing to Skylab's hole-in-the-wall toilet. "But this one is somewhat different. You just sit on the wall and do your thinf." He said the most important part o the task, "the one thing you don't want to forget," is to turn on a suction blower that pulls "'aste matter into plastic bags behind the wall. The Skylab bat hroom is the first aboard a spaceship that resembles one on the ground. Lousma was using two common na ,·igational instruments. a sextant and n sradimeter, lo sec if extended spaceflight affects lhe ability or a man to take space navigation measurements through one of the ship's windows. The sextant measures angles between lli.·o stars and between stars and the edge of the moon, \li'hile the stadimcter measures spacccrart altitude. The hand-held instnnnenll have been tested in space before on short miS!llons, and results o! the e~riments proved a man can na\1lgate using the simple tools and without the help of a computer. Garriott also reported three tiny min· nows bom Jn space appeared to be com· pletcly orientl'd. to zero gravity, ap- parently adapting while In th1 egg. Jte said the minnows' parents, taken by the crew to Skylab, were swimming er· ratically in their plruitic aquarium, "ap· parently Still unoccustomed to weightlessness . During a telcvislon program beamed to MIJ~on Control Tuclday night, Garriott also sbowed pictures of Anita , a 1plder, perclled In the middle of whAI he called a ''beautiful web." (. ' I " ' .. r ' • • ' ' UP I Ttl-"tll' Heat Wave Still Grips East Coa st By The Associated Prt11 Stifling heal gripped moch ol the Ea•t Coast and Midwest today, bringing ott another five percent voltage cut in Ne"( York state, scattered curtaUments of auto production and ~ polluUOft probt lems in the Washinrton-BaJUmore a~.: Even in the reiitCVely . cool j>aclf1a Northwest . a severe drought lower~ hydroelectric production, and Oregon Gov. Tom McCall called for a voluntar~ IO percent cut in power use. Jn response, Portland television statlo~ KG W-TV moved daytime news operar tions outdoors. The station estimated it saved 135 kilowatt hours dally by using natural light. . ! The power crisis was most serious In New York state, where temperaturq soaring into Lhe 90s made for a massive use of air conditioners. MOTHER SITS IN RUINS OF HER ORIZABA HOME AFTER THREE OF HER CHILDREN PERISHED M111ive Killer Earthquake Rumbles Along Ancient Fault In Mount1inOU5 Central Mex ico For a second day in a row, a S percei;i t voltage cut was in effect as demand r&- ma ined at record peaks. The State Power Pool met a demand Tuesday fQr" 20,132.000 kilowatts. highest in history. and said it expected demand to go atW higher. General Motors reported that opera- tions at its Linden. N.J. plant were curtailed as some of lhe 1,750 workers left jobs beeause of the heat. Romes Destroyed Milk at School To Take Jump; Program Ended Some emplayes at Chrysler's Warren, l\fich. truck plant stopped work , forcing a shutdown of the facility which employs 2,000 on the day shift. Survivors of Earthquake Numbed by Ruins, Dead Schools along the Orange Coast will have to raise the price of milk sold by the carton when. students return to Ford and American Motors reported normal operations. The Washington area s we I t ere d through another day of near·record temperatures, smog and power failures. The temperature hit fJ'1 Tuesday and w1s hovering al tha t level today. The natlm's capital had an air pollution alert fol' the fifth straight day, and the 17th of the year. ORIZABA, Mexico (UPI) -A gray. haired woman dug through a waist·high rock pile that used to 1?e her borne. A middle-aged man watched silently while 'wreckers tore at huge concrete slabs that cover a whole city block. It was an apartment house before the quake~ The man, Miguel Angel Cisneros, used to live there. l't'Olll Pllffe 1 QUAKE ... Cross officials said about 800 persons were injured. They estimated 100 persons died in Quecholae in Puebla Sta te: 80 in Cludad Cerdan, 178 in Orizaba., two in P4fbla and two in Cordoba in Veracruz State. Others died in scattered areas. Officials said Puebla , Mexico's fourth largest city with a population of 550,000 located 80 miles southeast of 1'.1exico Ci· ty, also suffered extensive damage. UPI reported Timothy Berry reported Crom Orizaba that the Swiss-style city y,•as half destroyed as score!: of buildings toppled, burying occupants in rubble. Hundreds were left homeless. i\layor Humberto Guitierrez said the city 's 350- bed hospital was badly damaged. Schools ~'ere demolished. Orizaba was left without electri city or running water. Rockslides c Io s e d highways into the city. AU com- munications with the outside world, the other side of the Sierra 1'.·ladre moun· · tains, were cut. Dazed survivors \vandered the littered streets looking for relatives or possessions. "It v:as horrible." said secretary I\1arina Garcia. 18. "It was the worst thing I have ever seen. Tt sounded like the \Vhole \vorld \vas shaking." * Scouts on Trip In Mexico OK Following Quake A party or eighl Orange Coast Girl Scouts and their two leaders are safe and sound today in Cuernavaca, · Mexico, after riding out Tuesday's earthquake In Mexico City. Scout o£ficials in Orange County learn- ed late Tuesday by telephone that two of the girls actually slept through the quake. "They are all just fine , .. Girl Scout spokesman I\1rs. Eva Sachs declared to- day, praising efforts by local Pacific Telephone Company personnel to make connections to the quake damage zone. "One operator worked on our call for several hours.'' she explained. She said officials talked with Afrs. 'Edward Spurgeon, of Cypress, who ac- companied the girls to Mexico along with !'i1rs. Michael Welt of Newport Beach. She said the party, bound for an in· ternational gathering at Our Cabana , a Girl Scout hospital in Cuemavaca. stayed In Mexico City until travel was declared safe. . The Girl Scout party including Terri Bergman and Sandra Kleeman , Costa Me:ia ; Mary Lou Horner, Tustin; Barbare Llnd,.y, Midway City : JUI Black, Los Alamitos; Karen Kalar, Garden Grove, and Susan Thomas and Judy Leonard, Cypress, lcrt Aug. 23 and Is due back a week from today. They are high ochool-88• Glrl S<out• selected lrom among appllcanl3 aeeklng to '"l'ru<nl Orange County at this year'S lntematlonal gathering at Cucmavaca. classes this fall. J1is sister died there. The U.S. JX!partment of Agriculture Or izaba is in a daze, like the woman has suspended its school lunch milk digging through the rocks, still not show-subsidy program because Congress ing emotion. hasn't yet appropriated money to buy the The town. nestled in a green alpine milk, valley in the Mexican Sierra Madre The cancellation will affect about 40 mountains, was hit Tuesday by the worst million children nation-wide, federal of- of a violent earthquake that rocked most ficia\s estimated. o! central Mexico. Only schools \Vhich operate with a There was no electric power. No drink-''type A" feclerally·subsidized lunch pro- ing water. Traffic ran in detours around gram \Viii no longer get the subsidy, the streets, filled with fallen bricks, which has averaged three cents per pint adobe, wood, cement and glass. of milk. People gathered in darkened cafes and Schools that have no lunch program al on street cornrs. "Where were you when it hit?" they all will ~tinul! to get milk subsidies. asked each other. This involves about six million students. 1'-tany stood to watch the crews clear Those subsidies will be paid for out of the wreckage. S25 million approved by Congress under a Cranes and bulldozers helped with the "continuing re.solution" pr~r to summer big pieces. one group tied a cable to a recess, agrlCulture officials said. damaged building. They pulled until the Action hasn't been taken on the wall twnbled down in a cloud of dust. agriculture departn1ent's full fi scal 197il Occasionally, a Red Cross ambulance appropriation. A $97 million allocation is sped off, whining, carrying another body pending in a cOnferenee committee. taken from underneath the wreckage. ''\Vhen Congress provides the money The Packard Building, a three-story for this program, we will reconsider our apartment complex, was once a landmark here on the city's main action." said a department official. avenue. But children won 't have any problems Half of it collapsed. Its 100 sleeping oc-if they buy the ''nutritious type A" lunch, cupants \Vere all feared dead. a number of Orange Coast school of. Cisneros shared a first floor apartment ficials polled said today . with hls siste r. He spent Tuesday night The regular. subsidized meal includes "'ith his mother. in her house. and lived. milk as part of the menu and won't cost The Potomac Electric· Power Co. had lo replace six transformers. 3 2 transformer fuses and 11 line fuses . "When you get into three or four days of .this, things begin to go wrong ," said spokesman John Grasser. ' 'nJe Virginia Electric Power Co. reported about 20 minor power failures }n Northern Virginia. including one of five hours in south Arlington. Baltimore had an air pollution alert, and lbe Maryland Health Department ordered 28 industrial operations in th'e area to cut back hydrocarbon emisslods by 25 percent. ' The Ba.ltirnore Gu & Electric Co. said there were no problems supplying powl!r despite temperatures of around 100. Philadelphia's prpblem was water pressure whicli' Coli\mlnloner carmen Guarino said ';was about one-thifd, what it should ha'.ve been." . He blamed children turning on fire hydrants to cool off, a trouble also plagu· .ing New York City where lower.t pressures in some areas cut orf water in the top stories of tall buildings. The Port Authority used five emergeo· cy generators in the twin llktory towers of the World Trade Center tn lower 1'.1anhattan, reduced lighting, air conditioning and elevator service and an- nounced it had cut power requirements by 21.5 percent. His sister died beneath the concrete. any more this fall , said a food service 'N K k' Ill "That's my stuff they're taking out representative in the Newport-Mesa 0 DOC · egal now." he said, pointing to a squashed Unified School District. mattress. "That's where they found my Milk costs the district 9.5 cents per pint SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -The state sister." and has been sold for six cents, with the Supieme Court said Tuesday California He stared at the wreckage with dry, federal government paying the dif· judges cannot issue no-knock search war- unblinking eyes. ference, the Newport-Mesa District of· rants. In a +3 decision, the court ruled An ambulance was called as wreckers ficial explaint'd. Tuesday that state law expressly pro. pulled out a body. If a child buys the milk a la carte, he vides that officers can break into a house "That's the lawyer, I foget his name. or she will haev to pay IO cents for it this only if they are refused admittance after But he was one or my neighbors." fall. announcing their authority and purpose. ~;;;:;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I Sox-Wickdry-Cotton Tube-Tennis Shoes~asketball-Tennis Football-All Purpose Gym Pants-Reversible T-Shirts Wannup Suits Sweat Suits Tennis Rackets Handbaff Gloves RacquetbaU Racquets Speedo Swim SUits Open 9 to -6 -Closed Sundays · • 646-1919 eas11et11ans Volley BaDs & Nets Footballs Playground Balls Ouckf eet Fins Water Wonder Boards Skate Boards Back Packs Slee~nr B;:gs Bonk Bzgs Rale~h Bikes Repairing-Tires-Tubes ' CLOSD JUNDAY I I I \I ' I I I, I ~ I At Your Service A Sunday. Wednrsday 11nd Friday Feature Of Ibo Dally Piiot Go' o probter11? 1'1!en u1r1te Pat 01.11111. Pat wilt <'Ut red ((/jJf, flt't tht • 1111.suier1 and U''tJOfl I/ (J 11 11eed tu 'tt l ;~Ive i11eq tu ties 111 g11v- l!M1men t aud husnlfiill Mtlll y 11 U f l}Uti· !io,1~ to P1u Liu •itt I A1 Yout Se,.vrr~. fJ1c11 1pc t:ous / Oail'!I />ilot. /J.(J Heir. 1.5fin . C.:nsw AleFn. (:a .. 92626. lnrlud" 1101.1' 11.e11h1•11e 11 11mhpr Plnyiny II At111i11 DEAR PAT: I v.·oold like to comment on the lett er ahoul old records that np+ peared in lhf' Aul.!. fl column . Records by Caruso, Harry Laurdcr, Fritz Kreis ler and Fred Waring art• by no means rare. H's ra\lacy lha t !he possessor of any Ca ruso records can sell then1 nt a fan. taslic profit. Caruso made hundreds of .records from 1903 unfil his drath in 19'll f~r the Victor Company. and they ~'ere big sellers not only during his lifetime. but up to the present li1ne. Jl.1any of his 78 'f'J)m records \Vere rl'tained in the -catalog unti l Victor stopped producln~ 78s. and many of them arc now available on LPs. 1'1K•y were such ~ig sellers that ,even the original issues of many of his ,records turn up for a dime or a quarter at Goodwill and Salvation Anny stores . '.The same is true of the other artisto;; mentioned and since these artists' --records have been released on LP. there "is no reason for anyone to pay a large sum for the original recordings. There is .no use in contacting record manufac· .urers si nce lbc companies have the -original master recordings and \vould ha,·e no int erest in copies. Q.R., lluntlngton Btacb ... •· Rtcord dealers In lht l..cts Angrles nrea do buy old rerords. 1nainly lo ma lnlain .. ~,·aritd seleclion for specific reques ts . (rom custom ers. Your 1,11er is ap- prtclattd since its information ma y save eld record owntn A lot of di sappointment , if they rxpeelffi lo jtUln a small (ortune ·Jroin 1ht sale of 1heir C()IJections. In \'iew of the r'lall\·t ly small valur of old rttortk, perhaps so1nt or our readers ·•·ouJd be willlng to share a ie¥1' of their . ','oldies'' "'Ith a ~mi-ln\•alld rtlired genllrman who bas quite a coll,ction of bis o"·n, but \1rould like to bur Mime , .. new" old recordings. Aay lelte"-of· fertng reconl donallon1 will be forwarded to thlJ reader, G.S .• San Clemente. itrr About PCB• ' DEAR PAT: I read thal the F'ood and Drug Adml nistralion has restricled the tl!le of polychlortnated blphemyls tPCBsl to the production of foods, food p.1ckaging ·and ani mal feeds. I know these are •che mical additives. but I'd Jlke ' to find out '4'hcn PCB's were developed, the purpose of their use in food processing and "'hy lhr FDA has decided to ban them. R.N .. Fountain \'alley ' PCBs are Industrial chemicals that are usffl ¥1'idel}' in food manufacturinJll: plants in the heat·trratini:t: proc~ss that destro ys barteria. Occaslonally . as a result of in- dustrial accidents and ¥1'ides pread ex· istence in Ute en\'ironmenl. PCBs apprar in food ils,lf. first de\•rlopt'd in 19'l9. lhrse chendcals ulllO are used as in· ·•redJents in a hroact range of products, Including paints, plastics, rl'Sin!i, inks. · \l'axrs. adhrsives. rubber. asphalt and -\1triou1 .building . malt.rials. FDA 's re- striction Is based on resulls or lests ·made on animal! that show the subjects •ustalned lh·er damage afler bclng e.'\'.· -posed to high C'Oncentratlon§ of PCBs In Chrlr diet. Although the effects to bumans of low-le,·tl, long-term etptwnare are not kDO\Yll1 the new regPlltions also rlitHbU~h ncceptable tentporary PCB le,·els In product s. Some appe1.r1nce of llC81 Is ana\•o4dable bccaUst the chtmi cals arr ~o p~rvaslvely present lu lht environment. Print• OH 1f •11 DEAR PAT : In response to an ad- vertising offer from Teri paper towels. which I received by mail along wltb a 'packet of other similar ads. I mailed an ·order on ~1ay I for three prir)ts-on-<:an- tras of oil paintings by ramous artists, enclosing a check for $15.95. The offer said to .allow three weeks for delivery and I requested the canvases to be sent lo my mother Jn New Mexioo. They have not arrived and r ve lost the address ·,vhere I sent the order. : R.1\1., Corona del Mar • l>on FAhl, n Southern Ca lUornia ltlvlsk>nn l sales 1na nngc.r for Klrn~rly· J;la~k Corporation. has telephoned you )ind hl1 firm 's headquarters at Neenah, "Wis. heodquarter11 rcgordln~ the mls1l11g canv11ts you ordered fnr your mo1htr. A :tleadquarters spokesma n then t-ontacled· ~me lo offer as!lurance this order Is 'tec:etvtag: speedy . rt--processtng, since Ximbtrly-C lark·1 re<:ord11 Indicated the canvases bad betn shipped prtvioilslf. It •"''' noted that the coupon offtr lndk:attd • • foar-to-slx wttk delivery pe~ and •pointed out th11t 1r you had contacted .:·klmbe.rly-Clark pe.111onell y, 'the deUvery \problem would have been lnve11tlgeltd at ,your request Anyone "''ho c11 11't retell Jthe mannracturcr of A parttcolar product l.wlll find the parent tnmpany'1 name i118ted on l~t product"• lnb<J. t ;J<'BI Arrests 'Agent' ' WASHINGTON tVPI ) -The fBI 8'id , , loday II nrrestcd o ~year-old U.S. lcltlzen on charges of po~esslng an Illegal electronic listening device and acting ns "an llleRRI foreign agenl on behalf of Zam· bia. The ft'BI announcenlcnt Identified the man M Mnrshall Soghoian • .. - Wtdntsday, August 2t), 1q73 H DAILY' PILOT ., :J _. f!J'13: Y~r Sunanaer Stayed Honae . Bv JOUN ZAIJ.~I\. 0t 1111 Otll't 'lltt lltfl This may go down as the year summer never arrived on the Oraoge Cout. Lifeguard record5 r fd: ~ewport Beach show that' in ttte.t~ree !lltJ\11\et months of June, July and Augu$t there have been ju.st 17 of 99 days that t'Ould be ca lled mOslly sunny. Officials in olher cities have similar specifics . And the ,.·eathcrman says Uwt although conditioos are I m p r o v I n g , t~stal areas can expect the same basic p111tcrn of cloudy and foggy days to con· tlnue at least ti ll early September. "There may be a little more sun in lhe next l\vo \\'eeks than there has been in the past two months." said Oscar Nichols, dlstrlct fori=casttr for !he Na- tlooltfWt.other SerVloo~ln Los Angeleii. ·•eut the general conditions thnt creatl'd the cloudy weaUier Jn thi' pa.st are still holding and w~ expect them to hold for the foreseeable future." Nichols said, To the Orange Coast, wbi~ normally gets alinost cloudless sky 1n July and August, this weather Das been a shock. "It's the worst summer I've seen in 17 years as a lifeguard," said liuntington Beach Captain· Douglas 0 ' ArnaJL "I've got only orle v.·ord for I! - terrible," he said, "Even on the days "'hen the sun does come out, it's usually onlv for few hours in the afternoort," D'Arna'n said. 1.,guna Beacb_ lileguar~ oapJai/J 5JUtt Baird, a !Ueguard since 19S2. agreed that this Is the "'orst summer than he has ever seen. "\Ve've h..1d only 10 days that I can think of when the weather "'as decent," he said. Nichols forecast this morning that the Orange Coast \viii see increasing cloudiness as the wee k continues with the sun comini: out in the artemoon if it comes out 'at all. "Of t.'Ourse memories can be deceiv· ing," said Nichols, who has been a sout hern California forecaster for 17 yeurs. "but Ibis is certainJy the cloudiest summer I can remember." The poor weather has been attributed D•Ur ~Utt Sl•ll Pllolo MONOAY WILL BE LAST DAY FOR FARM-ORIENTED, SEVEN-ACRE AMUSEMENT PARK Nestled 1n a C•nyon off Crown Valley Parkway, Area Used ta Be Cawboy Campground Old M~Donald"s Closing Mission Viejo Amuse1nent Farm Not P<iyi1ig Off By JAN WOR1:H 01 th9 D•llr ~lilt Sl1tl '·This thing musl<i gone uround a jillion times." Fulton Shaw sa id with a smil e as he and his wi fe Kay climbed on to the old-fashioned mule-driven ca rousel for a photograph. The park, Old McDonald's Farm in Jl.1ission Viejo . was deserted, except fo r lhc squa\.\•king of chickens and an OC· easional pig's grunt. Since last Sept ember. the seven-acre farm-oriented children 's amusement park ha s been open only on weekends. Now even tha t compromise has provf'd unprofitable. and the Shay,•s. owners of the tot spot. have decided to close it do"TI. ~1ooday \ldll be the last day of opera- tion. Though Shaw said good naturedly he and his \.\ife are "just t~·o happy failures." there's little chance the two v.riJl settle for inactivity. Shaw, a california native. has been an animal trainer for 35 years. At Old McDonald's Farm his trained rab bit. Buck Bunny. rode a ca rt down a hill. A pig v.•ent down a slide. Chickens rang bells. Ile Cigure.l_bis training talent will cojnc in handy in televi sion and film work . Kay Shaw, \Vho met Fulton y.·hen thev \Vere bol h V.'orking al Knolt 's llerr\· Farm. specializes in chlldren·s activitie.s and during Old A1acDonald's four years in Jl.1ission Viejo she has catered hun· dreds of birthday parties for child ren on the grounds. The Shaws hope to direct their e!forl s to educational television . or the 75 domestic animals at the farm . including rabbits. exotic breeds of chickens. burrows. mules. goats. pigs and turtles. the Sha"•s v.·ill keep only the rab- bils. Thl' rt-st will be sold. possibly to two simi lar companies who specia lize in the same kind or entertainment. "This is a sad decision ," Mrs. Shaw said. "Even if we go into children·s TV programs or commercials. we'll miss all the little kids y.•e've had here." "We've never made any money here." Shaw added. "We made a lot at Knoll 's but when we moved down here there seemed to be some confusion in the public's mind about where we were and who we were." They said they Jove the location. leased from the_ Mission Viejo Company. Nestl - ed in a little canyon off Cro,vn Valley Nixon Doesn't See Any Recession for Arrierica By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL President Nixon is confident there wi ll be no recession next year and docs not contemplate a tax increase, according lo a White House spokesman in San Cle· mente. Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. Warren said Tuesday the chlel executive is confident that govern1ncnl·sponsorc<I C!cono'!lic policies and· bu d g ct n r y restraints "\viii bring inflation down lo rea.'Klnnble levels." · The President is "or course concerned about the inflalionary situation." Warren told reporters. But he pointed out that Nixon's chief economic advisers. including Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz and Herbert Stein. cbainnan of the Council of Economic Advisers. "feel stron gly a balanced budget can· be achieved this year and that would obv iously negate any need for a tax increase this year." Nixon prom ised in tht: last election cumpaign there would be no federal tax boost. He has spent some of his working hours at the Western \Vhitc ~louse t'evlewing the status of the economy. Tiger on Loose But Escc1.pee Does1t't Get Far A tiger escaped from Lion Country Safari in Irvine Tuesday -but he wasn't in any hurry to run away and bt'C'Ome ·a man~ater . Dale Cloutier, assistant general manager of the animal preserve. said guards found the tiger silt ing calmly under a tret ln a parking lot, less lh~1n 60 feet from where he had escaped. A Llori Country cmploye tranquili zed the unim:il ,and le!! than 30 minul.es later he was back In the renet'<I wlldcn1css. Few visitors had arrived at the time. Cloutier said. "This tiger is very tan1r and getting pr Uy old ." Cloullcr said. The animal look advantage or a second's delay as guard closed a gate at t~ back of the. preserve and leaped through the gap. ClouUer said the gate guard was nrcd. The nusled guard said he could hnvc betn mauled . "They need to fix up ttNtt back gate." he added. Parkway, the spot used to be a camp for cowboys of the original Mlssion Viejo land company. · Its tall eucalyp tu s and pepper trees v.1erC' carefully· preserved when the animal park v.·as buil t four years ago. "We're proud that we 've made our li\'- ing in an honest way." Shaw said. "We've made a lot of kids happy." , ~1any of the old.fashioned blacksmith equipment. harnesses, carriages. and saddles adding an authentic flavor lo the park are those which Shay.· collected and repaired at his 20-acre farm home in San Juan Capistrano. The couple have lived on the fann for 17 years. Shaw said the favorite animal act over t~e years has been Buck Bunny. a Siamese rabbit who rode a rolling cart down a ramp. But one of the most intelligent domestic animals, Shaw has learned is the lowly pig. ' "I've ta ught pigs lo take their own showers. turn on a radio. sit al a table, and cat ice cream,'' he said. C~i.ckens are valuable for their depen· dab1hty, not their genius. "I've got one chicken that's \\'orked for me 12 years " Shaw said. ' GEM TALK TODAY by HERE AND TH RE IN THE WORLD OF GEMS Rus~ia, accord ing to London sour· ces. has deci ded to sell diam onds through the world famou s De Beers organization rather than going it alone in \vorld markets. Reason~ 1'hey c;i n sell dian1onds faster through De Beers. ''The Sout hern Star." a movie clian1ond. has been confuse<1 \Vith ''The Southern Cross." the rough 118 carat rl ia1nond found in Rrazil in 1929 .. 4.ctu all y. 1'The Southern St:ir" never existed . Diamond~ on the moon. accord· ing lo the National Aeronautic and Sparecrart rentre in ~louston. T(\xas. are hi!!hly unlikely. Ex· tremely l(nv rarbon content of lu- nar n1ateria l~ makPc:: their di scoverv thrre rlo ubtr111 . Altho•1 vh th ere i.c:: a rPmnte nn1:c::ihililv tliat dian1onc1 ht"nrin tt 01atrri11 lc:: mieht be round cJt'lc::(I to the rc•1t,.r of the moon, The Rcl i:?i an diam('liitl trade has lo f't. in the Ja c::t f Pw vcars. 3.000 to 4 .000 r~peri,.ncPd r11tt"r~ to other countrlec:::. prinrin::ill v l:c:raet. can~· int? a cri:c:i~ in thP RP.-IO'lan indu,c::trv berau<e or the dlfllrultv of replac· ing such hl Rhl y skilled neoplo . to an unusUAUy deru>e layer al.cool and cloud·laden ocean ai r hovering over the coast. The marine air I.ayers forms every summer, Nichols said, but 1l0rn\ally is ot1ly about 1,000 feet !h.ick. Last weekend. however, it ~·as mcasl.U'cd up to 3,000 fet.'t. thick, and Tuesday it \V~ reported l,500 feel thick. "If the layer ls only 1.000 .feet thick or So. the sun can generally bum it off," said Nichols. "But if it is 3.000 reet thick. there simply Isn't enough time in the day for the sun to cut through it." TY.'O reasons are given for the al>- normally trublesome marine air front. One is that ocean temperatures this su1n· mer are about tY.·o degrees cooler than Labor Day Plata CHP to On Bad By ARTllUR R. VINSEL 01 1111 Dill~ ~llol 51111 Drinking drivers. o v e r ·fa l i g u e d motorists. dru g·uscrs. no vice camper jockeys and highballing 1nobi1e home· haulers \viii be targets of Orange Coun- 1y's California Highway Palrol force for the 1973 Labor Day \Veekend . Special. stepped·up traffic enforcement -with 102 officers on overtime shifts financed by federal fund gran ts -begins al midnight Thursday . Goal of the four·dav crackdown under the r~atal Accident Reduction Through Enfort-e mcnt tF'ARE) eonccpt is to save negli ge nt motorists fron1 themselves. and to protect others. "By virtue of previous traffic co llision experience, Orange County is a high risk area." CHP Public Information Officer Jerry Ma,xwell explained. lie said Capt. \Villian1 A. Fradenbur g has ordered 102 CHP officers to special extended duty convering specific hazard areas on county highways. The extra pay will be covered by $300.000 in federal grants administered by the state to city and county la\\'men . Despite a trend towa rd fey.·er ratalities on some holiday weekends in recent years. due to public awareness of the spe<:"ial highway dangers, California set a l.abor Day Weekend record of 73 holiday· related deaths, last year. And Orange Counfy -while its own Labor Day 1972 toll was about the sa1ne as an averaee w~kend -is one of 40 regions of California classed as a specific traffic trouble area. "locally, people can look for a little more 'heat' than usual,'' Officer Maxwell warned, in outlining the CHP battle plan for the four-da y weekend commencing at midnight Thursday. The CHP will put in 841 extra min· hours during the period. One of the special danger areas pegged. by CHP offi cers is the Jong, flat San Diego Freeway route through south Or· ange County, where the unnoticed speedometer needle often c r e e p s dangerously past the posted limit. Santa Ana Canyon Road is also ex - pected to be a high risk thoroughfare during the anticipated Friday night mass exodus of motorists seeking holiday fun at inland camping and recreational areas. A si mila r situation is expected Mo1Jday upon their return, with added hazards of fatigue and the residue in some cases of holid ay drinking. The growing array of recreationa l ve hicles on the market and road today has also complicated the CHP role in traffic safety law enforcement. Campers mounted on heavv-duty pickup trucks, large mobile homfs and Lady Seiko zw,3,.,._ C1!t dt0I Th, 1,,hion ""••ihf•c• of '7J i1 br l•d• s,;k o. J.C. no.rmal. which gives the sea more abiliL 10 cool I.be air passing over it. The second reason is that an ab- normal low pr~sure art•a ha!!! developed over ealltern California, Neva<j,a, and Utah, leaving a vacuum In the coutal area that is filled by lhc intruding layer I of marine air. 1'bere is one possible benefit from all l this cool \\'ettther, however. ~ Nichols says that the conditions that ortcn create Indian Su1nn1er heat wave! in Southern California do 1101 seem to be j' developing •·1 cannot s<iy \\ilh certainty that we l \ron't have any heat 1vaves in Sep- tember." he said. "bul thev do seem lo ~ have less likeli hood of 'cle'veloping !his ., )car than they have had in years pasl.'' ii Zero In . Drivers .. trailers. and sport motorc ycles all havr an impact on the situation. "Take the inexperienced l r a i I c r ov.·ner ... says Officer Maxwell, criticizing the fact many such y.·eekend vacationer!> are not adequately trained in ha ndling a car or truck and trailer. "He's really only half a driver when he gets behind the \vheel." Officer Maxwell said. He said the same hazard can be blam- ed on some owners of camper rigs who pc:-haps drive them only rarely. "We're nol saying people shouldn 't htn•c such things." he explained, stress- ing the potential dangers due to too much confidence and too little praclit-e. And a substa ntial number of motorists hit the road in rented or borrowed recrealional vehicles v.·1thoul adequate experience. . "A guy 1nay drive a little V\V for 29 days out of the 1nonth. and then he climbs into thi s tall. heavy monstrosity and dOC'f 65 down the fast lane o[ the freeway," said!Officer MaxweU. The CHP ofricer -one of whose dutie s is releasing pre,.s infonnatipn .on. all county traffi~ fatalilies, which average one every 36 hours lh~ugbout thl;! year -also mentioned motorcycles.· He said the speciaJ task for~ of iretrolmen assigned to Labof Day duty under , lhe \"ARE,,! llfOUatili• will be watchJn'g for careless cyclists, especially those speeding or w,aving in and out of traffic. lie said that CHP officers won't be st rictly ou t to enforce traffic laws with citations. but to help out in other ways. They expect to assist in many of tho5c unforeseen cases that can mar anyone's holiday, such as vehicle breakdowns4at lhe roadside which also crea te traffic hazards. ALICE B. TOKLAS BROWNIES AGAIN? OLTEN , Switzerland (AP) -Thtee restaurant patrons were h~pit.alized and others became hysterical after eating al- mc ·· .l cookies passed around by a young tnan. Police said the cookies contained hashish. The young man claimed he had mistaken it for a spice, but\.authorities bcx..ked him on a drug cha rge) C11t dial, 179 SO 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COST,t, MES,t, CONVENIENT T~RMS 21 YEARS JN THE SAME lOCATION l1,,li:Am•tic1rd -M•htt Ch1191 'HONI: '41·1•01 • -- - 1 ~·4 DAILY PILOT Reds Hold Con grt;!ss , Back Mao "HONG KONG (UPI) -The com- munist Party or China. meeUng in secret session in Peking, held Its 10th Natiooal Congress and unanimously reatrumed the leadership of f\1ao Tse-tung and Premier Chou En.Jai, according to a communique issued today. The congress , in effect, endorsed the Mao-Chou program aimed at improving relations \Yilh the United States and took the unusual step of denouncing the Soviet Union by name. The Congress. rumored for the past few "·eeks, was held from Aug. 24·28. • e Halt So11gh1 HOUSTON (AP ) -Lawyers for one or t,v.·o youths accused in the homosexual ~ayings of 27 persons say !hey will ask .t,he Texas Court of Cri1ninal Appeals to (..__I_N_S_H_OR_T_ •• _. _) stop a psychi atric examination ordered for their client. La"''Yers for Elmer Wayne .Henley, 17, said Tuesday they will ask the appeals court to block a mental examination for their client after State District Court Judge William M. Hatten refused to withdraw his Aug. 22 order directed at 'both Henley and David Owen Brooks, 18. e itfi11t101oa Bor11 ' HOUSTON (UPI) -Minnows born in space are adapted to zero gravity the moment they hatch from their tiny egg s. But tlieir parents, carried aloft by the Skylab 2 crew, still are not accustomed to weightlessness and are swimming in tight, backward flips .. • "These newly hatched rrtirmows have never done that," Astronaut Owen K. Gar- riott said 1\Jesday from the Skylab menagerie wttich now includes five min- nows and a pair of we~pinning spiders. ·•tt was as if they had already adapted when they \~rere still in the egg. And once they'd been batched Ibey have no prob- lems.•• e .f'• .. lly S lai11 ROANOJtE, Va. (UPI) -A family of six "\'!!•found shot to death in their home TueSiay night, and police said ' it "ap..· peared to be a murdei.-su.icide in v.ttlch the father killed his wife and their four children. The victims were Charles M. Nail Sr., an ¥QeD'lPloyed locksmith, his' wife SharOI, both about Z9, an(i their four children. Their bodies were found in their three bedroom home in the northwestern part of this Virginia mountain city by a re]atiVe who had gone to check on them. U.S. Will Mov e ' Mari11 e Units Out of Tluiiland W ASlllNGTON (UPI)' -The United States will start moving virtually all the Marines it has in Thailand to Japan starting Thursday. • The Defense Department said Tuesda y the 2,100 Marines involved in the move are members of Marine Air Group 15. When they are redeployed , only about 100 Mairoes will remain in Thailand.. -The pullout is being made under an agrffment reached Friday between the United States and Thailand. Involved are about 13.550 U.S. military personnel and more than 100 aircraft lh at h:iid been in- volvetl .in the war in Southeast Asia. The !\farine' air group has 36 planes. Cufrently there are about 720 U.S. vrarplanes and 43,000 servicemen sta- tioned in Thailand. u~.,._. .. Roof <:ollapse Military Cargo]~~ Had Families A board · I . '* I ..... M.\DR!D (UPI)' .:. ,\ U:S. ·Air Forte CH! Jet tr~noPOrt plan.< O'ashed il)d burst into flames, ..,..µesday night oq, a landing appmch IO ·'the huge Torrejon alrbaoe near M&illid. 'l'llO Air Force said ' todoy 24 ·or the 25-pe~ aboard died 111- stanUy In the fiery. oxploskm. · . An Air Force S{:i>kesmao. Said the eole survivor suffefed a fractmed 'leg and cuts, but bad a good chance ol llving.·11 ' identified him°' as lhe plane1s navigator, The news agency saJd the passengers 'I Jst u _ Wiiiiam H. Ray, 25, of McGuire were ramilies or U.S. servicemen living Air Force Base, 'N.J. abroad and that they were on their way homo. .111E GIANT fow-engine Star!Uter The Mllilary Airlift Command (MAC) cargo jct carrlC!d a crew ol eight and 17 jet was en route from Athena to McGuire ¥ paaseng~. According to the Spanish -Air Force Base in New .Jersey, with a news agency Ofre, lhe dead Included stop plaMed at the gian\ Torrejon throe -and witnesses reported that airbase 40 miles Iran Madrid. there.Also 'ftte dilldren aboard. The plane went down tn a grove of oak Firstlran Truce ·Team trees between the vUlages of Huera and Pastrana , 22 miles from the Torrejon base, which is operated jointly by the air forces of Spain and the United Slates. The Spanish Aviation Ministry said the plane "lost contact with the Torrejoo control tower at 10:50 p.m .. _.and crash- ed near Hueva, bursting into flames on impact.'' ' Arrives in S. Vietnam ' SAIGON (UPI) -An Iranian advance team aniVed in Saigon today to prepare for replacing Canada on the intema~ truce team, but ran intp a series of stumbling blocks characteristic of the stalled pea~keeping operations in Indochina. The !Ive Iranians, led by Sta!C COi. Soltan Mohammad Etemad, arrived late at1Tan Son Nhut airPort and had to wait in their plane another half hour while a special lounge was cleared. THE mANIAN officers were then whisked away from the airport without stopping in the lounge and before a \Vaiting U.S. Embassy representative had a chance to greet them. The visitors were taken by mistake to the Iranian ambassador's residence and finally arrived at their hoteJ two hour! late. persons. It wa s the !int terrorist attack in Phnom Penh in a wee~ and a half_ Abbie Hoffman Seized in NY . In Cocaine Sale NEW YORK (UPI ) -Abbie HoC!rnen, a Chicago Seven de£endant and founde r of the Youth JntemaUonal Party (Yip.. pies ), was jailed Tuesday night on charges of trying to sell '500,000 worth of cocaine. Three other persons were arrested with Ho!fman. They were hel!I and onlered to appear in court today for arraigivnent. WITNESSES SAID !here was an ex- plosion and reported wreckage slrewn over a mile wide section or land. Spanish police sealed off the crash site. Alr Force soUrces said a U.S. F-4 Phantom jet fighter pilot flew over the stricken plane just before it went down for what was described 111s an emergency landing. ''It seemed to land all right, but then txAlnced up and broke up, bursting into names." the pi lot was quoted as .saying. Spanish news reports said the survivor \Vas rescued from the wreckage ol the plane's nose by villagers who arrived on the scene. "He was apparently ejected rrom the aircraft on impact and suffered multiple fractures of the le£t leg and multiple con- tusions," the Air Force said. "He is listed as being in relatively stabte condition and is expected to recover." One man died and 22 others were hurt when the roof of a New York subway collapsed Tuesday, caused a fire and trapped hundreds of rush hour commuters. Temperatures in the tunnel rose to 115 de- grees on the hottest day of the year in the big city. 'Mle advance team was expected to re- main in Saigon for two to seven days working out details for the arrival of • B k Iran's full 250-member 'COOtingent to the Rescued Hostages m . an _ -~E~~1:i:: ~::1;,:: POIJCE SAID an undercover agent posing as a buyer amnged lo jlUI' chase the illegal drug, a derivative of opium, in a downtown hotel. Pe>- lice Lt. Robert Mann said Hoffman had a groC<l1' bag with three pounds of etr caine, which l\1ann He was rushed to a Spanish hmpital at the nearby town of Guadalajara, then transferred lo the base hospital.at 'ror- rejon. THE BODIES of the victims were taken to a morgue at the base . . airfiort expressed hope the Iranian ar- . rival \\'OU.Id get the commission back to Pl d t S 2 C tors work. ;rhe panel has been stalled for a ea 0 pare ap mooth ~ince ca.nada ~lied oul claiming the gntup wa s 1nefrect1ve. The crash was the second air disaster in Spain within 16 days. On August 13, a Spanish airliner crashed while at- tempting to land at fog-shrouded La Coruna airport, killing all 85 persons aboard and one person on the ground. STOCKHOLM (UPI) -Police o!fie<:rs u'ho broke .into a bank vault Tuesday night and freed four ho.stages held for six days by two armed convicts, said today one of the woman hostages asked them not to hann the convicts. "After what they had been through in that vault, it's hard to understand the reaction." detective inspector Kurt Krantz said. Poi.KE ptysieians sai•-lbe other hostages -two women and one man - were "apathetic like they had undergone a thorou gh brain washing." But Mi ss Kristi n Enmark, 21 , scream- ed, ''Don't kill them'' whe n the police burst through the door. She was referring to Jan-Erik Olsson . the 32-yeaF-old con_vict who engineered the drama1 and Clark Olofsm, -his 26- year-old prison friend who aided him. "They never harmed us," ?t1 iss Enmark told doctors at th11 hospital where she v.·as taken. "I was tfiore afraid the police would do something so we v.·ould be killed." There had been rumors, den ied by the police, that the wom en hostages had been repeatedly raped. ~1iss Enmark's state- ment apparently refuted this. THE VOLU~1TEER officers, assigned to storm the vault armed with sawed off shotguns and knives after teargas had been injected. had orders to kill if necessary to save the hostages. "But the first we heard was one of the girls screaming: Don't kill them!" one of the officers said. Other police officials said the re9ction was strange "considering the rough treatment the hostages had been sub- jected to time and again .'' But Dr. Jan Agrell, a military psychiatrist, said ·"we must understand that this ~oman has been under severe stress for several days and what she says oow may not reflect the truth or whit she might feel a few weeks from now." The hostages were resting today in a Stockholm h>spital while Olsson and Olofsson were being questioned by police. DURING THE dramatic last minutes of the ordee.1 Olsson fired one final burst of bullets at police from the 40-by-40 root bank vault. Then, tears streaming down his face IJO!p the !~ gpj. Cried; l'i @~ up. I give up." That entled the t!f.001.ir ordeal that had the hostages pleading for their lives. Olofsson also surrendered without ·a stiuggle. Cliarges Weighed Against ·U11cle Of Race Clieater BOULDER, COio. (UPI) -District At- torney Alex Hunter said Tuesday be may file charges of contributing to the delin- quency of a mioor against a man who ad - mitted he helped his nephew cheat to win the National Soap Box Derby. Robert Lange Sr., whose son Robert Jr., 19, '''OD the national derty in 1912. said he convinced the 1973 winner, James Gronen, 14, to install an electromagnet in his car to get a better start in the race. Gronen was disqualified two days after he \Von the Aug. 18 final s held in Akron, Ohio. Hunter said he and Sumntit County, Ohio, prosecutor Stephen Gabalac would decide if they would each file their own charges in their own states Or whether one joint charge would be filed in Boulder. A SOUTH Vietnamese F o r e j g n :P.finistry spokesman said earlier Iran's delegation to the corrunission will be headed by Ambassador Assab Fadrri. !\ieanwhile, in the cambodian capital ol Phnom Penh, a terrorist 1iomb ap- parently timed to go off during President Lon Nol's news conference at the nearby presidential palace exploded in a busy market place tod ay, killing three lllOPl"MAN said was worth street. about $500.000 on the 1'he detective who set up the arrests said he had agreed to pay Hoffman $35,000. • "It's called a 'buy and bu st' in the trade_," M8!11 said. Until the time of ar- rest. Mann said "we did not know a~t Hoffman." The Air Force said in a statement that the last crash involving MAC ·that resulted in fatalities to pa55engen oc- curred in !965, and since then MAC aircra£t have flown more than 6.6 rnillioo hours without a passenger fatality. The cause of the accident has not been ~!ermined, but a board of Air Force of· ficet'3 will be convened to investigatt, the statement said. THE WOR•P'S, OLDEST WHISKEY PRESElllS THE WORLD'S OLDEST MAIL I'VE BEEN ASKED 10 LIST SOMI;' OF THE BEST THINGS THAT EVER HAPPENED 10 ME. HERE GOES .·· BIKINIS, DRI VE-IN MOVI ES, THE WHEEL, DEVILED EGGS, MEDICATED POWDER (DID I SUFFER FROM TOGA CHAFING)! AND BUSHMILLS. W HEN THEY MADE IT .IN 1608, THEY DIDN'T REALIZE WHAT THEY WERE DOING FOR MY LEISURE HOURS! G EE, I HOPE WE HAVE A LOT OF LEISURE HOURS I Heat Bakes Eastern U~S . • So111 e Rain Falls as Humidity Sparks Wild Weather "111111 •rid mot'"1"9 l!Ours becomlflfl W'ISf ~ M!Ulllwtll 12 lo lt kllOlt I" 1ftef'l\OO!'ls lod1y 111<1 ThurM11y. Hloll lod1y Mir 70, ~COl5111 temper1lur11 r•f'IV'I' from 61 10 61. l"ll~d t~1tur11 rl"Sll from st IO JS. W1fet flmPfl;ll!Jn JO.• Sun, Moon. Titles W•OMllOAY SKond high , , •.• :..• ••• ,, Kl:Ot P·"'· 6,1 Second low . . . . ~ .. ,,03 "''"' fl.7 . TKUll:ID~Y F•tit l\lgll .. . •..... ~. lt: .. a.m. S.6 Ffrtl low ............ •~JI •.II\. ~.1 S«Ol'ld l!lgll .....•...•.• lO:U 1>m. 5.S S1<0l'ld lo• ....... , . •:" p.m:: O.• Slll'I ltlttl •::U 1.m. S.h J:»"'-"'- Moon ltl ... 1:06 •.m, Ith l :IS p,IPI.. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Deli'le!y of the Daily ~~ ~ tuaranlC!d ...,,,ffq: " ,. .. Ill Ute . ,. ""' ~ !!JI ,.. ...... ,.. "" .. .. """ . ,.. "" .. ... .. 1:31 , ... s.i..., .. s..,, • ,. ... - Clf'f ., '-•• Satl1ef, • t 1,a Cal lif I ~ If "9 """1 ' Ja 11·.-1111111A ;1~es .. •1111 c.or ._ ..... 14!.tl!I .._....., .... .. ---· ... ,,141-1121 111-~­lllu~ .... loll '-IOI• illw' .. ll!~ll ' .... HMIUS -• I II I I I r I ~ I ) • . ·, ' ./ Wfdnesday, August 29, iq73 DAILY PILOT lf ~. ·· Bedayan hmocent 'Oaves $4.4 M·iUion' •, l Hughe~ ·Files Co1u1tersuit I • .. ' SAN RAFAEL (AP) - A jury has loWld 22-year .. ld Brent Bedayan Innocent by reason or insanity of shotgun- ning a MUI "alley family to death last October. "It was clear that Bedayan did have a psychotic delusion about Danny and there v;as some question about his father as the enforcer," said jury foreman Dale A. Stopp after announcing the verdict Tues- day. ' this was not an insane act by a young boy who bad nothing to gain, lheo there are no legally insane ~ In the state of Calllornla. 0 1 want to thank: you for Mr. and Mrs. Bedayan" Cox said. "I don't think Brent can · thank you now.'' .. TOE COURT'S instructions lo the jury directed them to return a verdict of voluntary manslaughter," Bales said. "'lbe results would have been dillerent if the judgt?'bad given them my felony·rnunler "Btrr WE couldn't find any :i.~llieo~°! ::~i= clearcut reason why he killed capacity irrelevant." Ruth. That's when we lowid In the 211 days ol trial him insane," Stopp said. testimony, Bedayan wu label- Bedayan had been accu>ed ed a paranoid·schiwphrenk by of killing Melvin Schallock, 61, five psychiatrist>. They said be had delusions of pain Im- his wile Ruth, 56, and his son, pulses sent telepballcally from Daniel, 20, lMt March 16 and Daniel Schallock and saw the then burning their home. · elder Schallock: as a, gangland· The seven-woman. nve-man type "enforcer." jury deliberated a little over UPIT ....... Biking for Funds Eighteen bicycle riders from Sacramento, between 15 and 22 years.old, are bik· ing across the country. The group, pedaling past the Capitol Tuesday, hopes lo forestaJ~ curtailment of Red Cross services in Sacramento. l(idnaped 11-year-old Home Again ---' Ag,ai~st Ex-cl1ief Maheu 'LOS Af'iGELES '(AP) -At· tomeys for Howard Hughes conlendtha~Robert A. Mahell. the deposed chief of llughes' Nevada empire, owea the recluse billionaire more than $4.4 mQlion. Hughes' Summa Corp. at· •toriwys listed the sum \Vht'n they gave notice in federal court Tuesday that they ¥tould ·fife·a counter-eomplaint Sep!. 17 against A1aheu. who is seek- ing $13.7 million damages in a libel suit against llughes Tool Co. l\1AHEU FIL.ED his su it in federal court two months after the January 1971 telephonic Dead Fir.e Fighter's Ashes To Be Spread SACRAMENTO IAPI -The ashes of a 21-year~ld San Diegoan \Vho died fighting a fire in the mountainous Big Sur area \Viii be scattered in that same region by his fello\\' fire fighters. a s I a t c SPokesman said. "' Jack O'Neal . spokes1nan for the state . Department 0 r Conse rvation. said Tuesdav the ashes of Danny Hyme will be spread Thursday night by corpsmen conduct en evening ·memorial service in his honor in the Big Sur State Park, O'Neal said. He reported Hyme's mother requested the action. Hyme worked for !he corps for 14 months and "'as based at the state agency's Los Osos Center near San Luis Obispo before his death Sunday_ l news conference by a man \\'ho said he was Hug'he! .. Maheu said he was Ubeled1 when the man explained the r eas ons for Maheu'·• discharge . l\faheu·s suit is scheduJed lb co1ne to trial before U.9! District Court Judge Harryi Pregerson Oct . 2.1. Pregerson requested the ao- counling of funds which at• tomeys for Hughes' Sumrr* Corp. eontend are owed tO Hughes by '-faheu. .' ,• SUMMA CORP. is the wholly owned Hughes finp which holds title to Hughes' Las Vegas holdings. The court filing says Maheu owes Hughes $4,458,4'4.38. That sum includes $2,12£1.000 paid Maheu \\•hen he was Hughes' top executive in Nevada from 1967 to 1970. !tlaheu's attorney, ~1orton Galane. said in Las Vegas that l\laheu would not comment. ' four hours Tuesday before finding Bedayan legally insane. The same jury had ronvicted Bedayan on three counts or voluntary mans'laughter P.1on- day evening in the "guilt" phase of the trial. LOS ANGELES (AP) -districl attorney's office said are flied later today. He has was anxk>ps to get some California Ecology Corps fire Nearly a week after her kid-Robert Lee Ray, 49, would be been booked for investigation privacy and thanked police fighters. His body has already been cren13ted and his ashes are being stored at the Mission f\.1ortuary in 1'1onterey, O'Neal "The propriety of ~1 r . ~ .. Jabeu's conduct will be decict- ed by a jury ol his peers." Galane said in a telephone in- terview. WHEN 1'1ARIN County Disl. Atty. Bruce Bales asked Tues- day that the jury be polled, each member aff11med the in- nocent verdict by reasoos of insanity on all three counts. nap, 11-year.old Tracy Gayle arraigned in Van Nu y s of kidnaping in the case. and the news media for help in The ash spreading will take Greenfield was home again t~ Municipal Court after charges The father said his family lhe case. place after Hyme·s fellow said. day, released from hospital ---------=-----------"-----------"-----=----------------- 1'tarin County S u p e r i o r Court Judge Henry J . Broderick immediately turned Bedayan. aver to the state Department of M en ta I Hygiene for transfer to a California mental facility. He called the verdict "a sound rewlt in the case." Before they began delibera- tions, Bales had told the jurors that ··at the cri1ical moment, Brent Bedayan could have stopped. But he consciously chose not to." BEDA YAN, slouched in hi s chair beside public defender Frazi.t Cox, showed virtually no emotion as the verdict v.·as read and the jury polled. Cox had compared his client to a "pressure cooker" that "blew up." He said that "if Docwr Gets Fraud Rap LONG BEACH (AP). -A Long Beach doctor has been indicted . on charges o f Medicare fraud in connection with a hospital he owned here. Dr. Phil Hansen, 64. and two hospital employes were charg- ed in 21 counts or mi..epresenting to the ~ial Security Administration "the reimbunable costs incurred by lhe hospital in order to fraudulently obtain Medicare hmds," the U.S. Attorney's of- fice said Tuesday. Hansen owned the 99-bed Woodruff Community Hospital from 1966 lo 1972; The in- dictments followed a 17-month federal grand ju r y in- vestigalion. the U.S. attorney said. treatment for a drugging, beating and rape. "Don't ever get into a car with someone yoo d o n ' t know,'' her father, Henry Greenfield, said in a warning for other children as the girl left UCLA Medical Center Tuesday clutching a big toy stuffed dog. "Don't hitchhike." th e Mission Hills father said. The girl said after she \Yas found abandoned in ~farina Del Rey last Friday th.at a l man had given her $2 to help distribute advertising leaflets. Meanwhile, the c o u n t y Church Says Boy's Death 'Extreme' BARSTOW (UPll -The death ·of ll·year~ld Wesley Parker last week, after his parents threw away t h e diabetic youth's insulin supply, .was dep)ored .. Tuesday • by .. a spokesman for the Ass~blies of God Churches in Southern California. 1• The Rev. William H. Robertson-, district superin· tendent of the sect. said while his church "believes in divine healing." it does not "endorse or condone the throwing away of life-saving medication merely because the individual is presumed healed." Robertson said, "We do not Identify with those who take extreme positiom of failing to follow a common sense way of life and wou1d not feel that an extreme position in this re- gard brings Mry particular glory to God, nor doe! it re- flect to the credit of the church.'' -ltllotol-lltltt1~­ , ... 1 .... •• .. sin, "'it• a. l-t It~~ Ciml Cinll IM ailllfa . ' ~ \ • "---~~~--_.:G~~~B::__Vi~0~U~R~~~~~/l.:);'~~~0~~~E~0~N~D~~~~~~\1~'5::_--::::::;:;: !', ~ " ~\ 1 ~ and Nights at Sea World ' I I I I Labor Day Weekend Saturday and Sunday 9 a.m. ·IC p.m., Monday 9a.m.•1:30 p.m. ( Featuring eontinuous eountry Western Entertainment by: THE LARRY 800TH 81\ND ITOP RATED ARTISTS FOR CAPITOL RECORDS) and THE · BRUSH 1\R80R 81\ND Free old fashioned hayrides every day for kids 4·1 2. IRECENJ'LY SEEN ON NBCS ''MUSIC COUNTRY'~ Fleet·footed lrolickin' and fancy steppin' (A square da!lce jombore<') PLUS Eye-poppin' frreworks Salurday 'n Sunday nigh!!;. ~R1!DIBL8 LBAPIN'eRl'M'ERS (NEW SHAMU FOR MAYOR SHOW) ooro'H OOPVING OOJBLB KITB l'LYlU 800 PEET 'WRDEVIL nM RIJS!NG & THE SKY FOXJ SIDE·SPUTTIN' M'tleS 1\ND eJ\RRYIN'.ElN (Tlfil AOUAMANIACS-WllH THE NATION'S HtGHIST HIGH DIVE-84 F'EE11 M0ST INeREDIBLB FElrr EVER PERFE:lRJ\\ED BY ~\l\N .!\ND l\NIMl\L (THE SU,\MU RIDE JUMPI 1\LL FeR 0NE L0W PRleE 1\T SFAWORLD. MJSSIE)N 81\Y • S1\N OIBG0 I ' I \ ~ I ' ' ' ' I L I 6 D,.,_ILY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE • Heliport , vs. Park It's ti111c for a showdown between the Jluntingt on Beach Police Department and the city parks commission over Lhe placen1ent of police helicopters and a fixed· wing aircraft next to the 220·acre central park. The showdown seems inevitable because both sides have made their positions clear, but neither the city ad- 1nlnlstration 11or the city council has taken any firm steps to solve the dispute. Police Chief Ea.rle Robitaille wants to keep his heli· port. and five helicopters, next to the park, off Gothard Street. He also said last week he'd Like to build a small landing strip (75 feet by 1.000 feet) next to the heliport for his department's new STOL (short takeoff and land· ing) craft. Last June, the parks commission issued a strong re- port recommending removal of the heliport and a pro- hibition on the use of a police plane near the park. They said such uses are not ''compatible11 with the quiet, pas· sive nature of the park. The chief can't be blamed !or defending what he !eels to be the best interest ol his department. But on the whole, the city administration has done a pretty poor job of handling the situation. It hasn't really handled it at all. When the heliport was built in 1971 it was biHed as merely "a temporary" facility. Now, however. poll~e spokesmen indicate it will cost $250,000 to move this "temporary" facility, whi ch obviously makes for a n1a· jor stumbling block to any removal decision by the city council. The three-acre heliport was also built and and sold at half-price to the city by the county -for park use. By agreement, the city should pay the county the other half or give the land back. if it remains a heliport. City administrators. however, say they can sol ve the Electronic 'Bugs' Could Backfire To the Editor: Newport Beach Police Chief James Glavas has proposed a citywide burglary alann netvtork via cable television which would link every home and business in this city directly to police headquarters. 1be chie£ pointed out that a variety of sensors could be installed by private fi.nns to signal illegal entry, fire, etc. He specifically stated that tbe police y,•ould inspect such imtallations. I feel it is im- perative to point out to the citizens of Newport Beach (in these times of Watergate) that there e~ the Potential for electranic e~~ing .at any: time or the <1811 or nlgbt directly by the police ~epartment. A LARGE variety or ''b u gging device!" could be affixed to such a system surreptitiously and allow direct monitoring at police headquarters of any and all conversations in every single home 'and business in this entire city. r do 'not sugges t 1hat the chief or anyone in our city government is remote- ly considering such application of this cable television alarm network : hoy,·e\'er. the potential existS. Times change. police ch!efs come and go; and political winds shift. Mae bugging of residences co11ld be implemented at any time by political fiat IN ADDITION, I would like to caU your attention lo t\1e events of southeast Asia in 1967 when Then Secretary of Defense Robert Strange f.1cNamara announced the construction of a sophisticated elec- tronic surveillance-interdiction 1 in e across the 17th parallel. Th e purpose of this highly sophisticated electronic Interdiction system fco<le name: Prajcct Mussel Shoals) wa s to stop or, at least, marked ly impede the flow Of men and material from North 10 South Vietnam. Portions of this electronic surveillance system bear similarities to the proposed burglar alarm system pro- posed by Chief Glavas. Amang the com- ponents of this eleelronic line \\'ere seismic sensors \\'hich triggered land mines in response to the vibration or human foot steps. trucks. and vehicles but \\fere capable of eledronically rejecting the seismic vibration of the ubiquitous \\'3ter buffalo. This systen1 \\'as installed across the J.7th paraJlel .. ~ an estimated cost of well in excess or l\\'O billion dollars. In short order, the very unsophisticated No rth Vietnamese fou nd that they could very readily ride water buffalo across the line, 1 would merely point out that no mailer how sophistic;ited the sensor system or a burglar alarm network is, professional criminals (even si mple rice farmers on occaalon) can find \\'ays to avoid it. DONALD R. STEELE, M.D. Nf~o11's Error To the Editor: The appoinlment of tlenry Kissinger as Secretary or State at this critical time may prove to be one cf Nixon's greatest errors. lt could wtll ~ult in serious damage to I.be people of Israel and to boLh the Jews and gentiles of I.he United States_ wmt TllE Moslem., confiscatlt11' many American oil producers. swimming In oil whlcb they might easily withhold' from the desperate Western powers and so loaded wllb gold that they are hard· pressed to find ways to spend it, a mediator ls needed who Is acctptable to both side&. tmagtne our appointing some Dr. Mohammed lbn Saud as Secretary and oetM!lng him lo Jerusalem to neaotille with Golda Meir and General Dvan ... lbe tcttams from both lsrlfel and Ameri.ca would reach hlgh heaven. Kissinger ii probobly the most com· I'· MAILBOX Lettt'rs from Tenders are welconie. NortooJ.ly writers should convey thei l' messtlQi!S ltt 300 u'ords or less. Tii e right to condense letters to fit space or eliminate li bel is reserved. All letters must include signature and nWling address, but names n1a11 be withheld on request if sufficieni rea.son is appare11t. Poetry will not be publislted. petent of American diplomats, but 1nore than brilliance is required to solve the Arab-Israel problem. The mediator mu st be personally acceptable to both. Should Kissinger fail in his attempt at D.1edialion while American cars stand immabile, htuses are cold and people cartn(lt reach their jobs, a st rong reaction against both the Adminsitration arid Kissinger could occur, making the latter the victim of an impossible situation. RECOGNIZING its diplomatic ad· vantages we sent Irish ambassadors to Dublin, Jewish to Jerusalem and Italian to Rome. all with good effect. Are v,ie no\v reversing this proven policy by ap- pointing men of antagonisti c background? FRANK KLOCK A uto T!tr1n111!1 To 1he Editor : Sooner or later. lhe tyranny of ·•automobile consciousness" mu st cease. Surely you are aware of the obviously negative effects o! our attachment to the motor car. In the race of this chaos, there really is only one thing to say : No_ NO TO l\fORE J\1ETERS, no to more monies made from meters, no to more parking spaces, no lo any building (however "tasteful") to house more un- necessary automobiles. Before we can talk about "solutions" to our problems of urbanization, "·e must say no to the patenUy obvious patterns or our own self-destruction. JEREMIAH BOWDEN Unstable lfla11 To the Editor : Poor Ronald Ziegler. NO\Y, he has the hazard of bodilv harm added to the other humilJating burdens of serving as devoted slave and court fool to a presi- dent \Vho appears to be confu~ing himself \vlth one of the testier early English kings. ASIDE FROM what happens to Mr. Ziegler and his pride -or lack oC it - this country just cannot afford to keep suc h an unstable man as Richard Nixon in office. and the sooner we recognize it th e betler. Sinct he will never let go tus crown and sceptre voluntarily, the only answer Is to grasp the ne:Ule and im- peach him . MARGARET NOLEN r----B11 George ---1 Dear George: \Vhen you were young did you think you hnd to always make passes at girls to be "with it" and Popular? CLARA Dear <.."Iara: Actually, I never cared much about being popular. I ju!l did Rll thnt because t Ilk gi rls (How did you find out, anyhow?) ' I problem by transferring j•on paper" some central park acreage bought with city funds to the county. The county the re-dedicates that land to the city !or park use. That may untangle the legal bind "on paper" but the fact remains Hunllngton Beach residents have three less park acres than they should have. It's time the city council makes a definite decisi on on the compatibility of police ~ircraft next to the central park before any more "temporary" deals become per- manent fixtures. Chance to Serve ~tembers of the Founta in Valley City Council have put out another call for city residents who are interested in serving their community. This time, the council is looking for people who would be interested in serving on the newly created Cultural Arts Committee. The nine-member panel is be- ing formed to advise the city's Parks and Recreation · Commission and to provide some coordination between groups within the city that participate in the cultural arts. It sounds like a good idea. Now that Fountain Val- ley has nearly reached its full population growth, resi· dents and civic leaders are beginning to take an interest in the human environment of the city as welt as its phys· ical environment. \Vi th the possibility of getting funds from the coun- ty's revenue sharing money, city .councilmen are con- templating the addition of a cultural arts building at the Mile Square recreation complex. Formation of the Cul- tura l Arts Committee couldn't come at a better tin1e. •, '. H 'You men behind me keep an eye out for bushwhackers/' Dea1· Gloo1nv • Gus \Vill so1nebody please print a hard- to-gct-off but easy-to-apply bumper sticker that says ··PARKING SLOB" so T can quickly affix· it to cars that clog driveways to laun- dromats, markets and the like \\•here the rest of us citizens use the proper parking slats? I'll buy a dozen! J, ~I. Gloom,. GUI commtnll ilrl Wbmlllld by 1uder1 &nd do not nec:1:1uril\I ttfleel tt11 YlfWS of lllf lllWINHI'. 511111 YOllr "' llHVf II GI.my Gu1, 01il~ l"ilol. Good Ne'ws For Ailing Globetrotters ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ The happiest news for world travelers since !he invention of Dramamine was reported recently by the World Medi cal Association, "'hich is dislribuling a pocket-size guide to English-speaking doctors in more than 70 countries around tbe world. This International 1.1edical Directory \viii be more help to Americans than to anybody else, since we are noloriously the \YOrst linguists since the Tasmania'ls raded front sight. An American abroad ca n sca rcely ask a \\'ait er for ;i glass or 1vatcr. much less describe an abdominal pain or an allergy 10 penicillin to a foreign doctor. The problem is made doubly acute by the melancholy fact that foreign .~1ctors, in my biased apinion, are generally in· ferio r to the American breed . Diagnostically and technically speaking, we turn out the most proficient medical men !if not women) in !he \\'Orld. NOT O~'L Y DO our standards s~m to be higher, but we are relatively free fram the medical paranoia tha t is rampant in so many other countries. The French, for instance, are, still obsessed \vilh "liver"': almost any complai nt you have that can 't be easily diagnosed is relegated to the liver in France. \Vhcn I suffered a nasty case of sunstroke at Cannes some ye<1rs ago, t\vO doctors solemnly assured me it '"as a li ver malaise. "No, no.'' I insisted. "C'est le Cilup de solt il.'' 'fhcy both laug hed na stil y; everyone knows that mad d o g s , r:ngllshmcn. and 1\merican tourists al\\·ays go out in the mid-daY heat ancl are impervious to sunstroke. It \\'as <!4 hours before 1 l.'fluld get them to stop treatinA: 1ne: for malncll~ de fole. Without my rudiment ary French, It might have been a "'eek. EVERY COUNTRY seems to have its favarite ailment , a5 a sort of grab bag Into "'hich its doctors throw any mysterious, obscure. or unusual syn· dromcs. 'l'hc art of the dl£ferentlal diagnosis has been brought to such a high level in the U.S. that v.·e have become sPoiled and forget how casually hit-or· miss a doctor can diagnose us in Madagascar or Morocco. There is reall y noth ing worse 1han a medical emergencr wbcn you are in a foreign counr.ry; your xenophilia quickly nies out the window, and all your old chauvlnlstlc reelings come back through the door. Surrounded by se\'en of Europe's most noted spedal~l,, you st!U wish that Marcus Welby would stride Into the room and straighten them all out. Bmits, Pla11es Aid S1111199le1•s " • New Drug Traffic Tricks ~ WASHINGTON -The government's ',\'ar against drug smuggling. trumpeted as one of the major domestic successes of the Nixon Administration, is losing tbe battle to fleets of small private planes and fast boats. Classified documents from the Customs Bureau made available lo us demonstrate the ex· lent of the govern- ment's failure. They natty state t.hat the narcotics agents can- oot compete with the ingenuity of the smugglers. The dope runners have ocganized the m o s t important sn1all boat operation since the evacuation of Dunkirk and the government's frag - mented narcotics forces are unable to cope with them. (JACK ANDERSON) In short. the situation is so out o( hand lhat A1afia and free--lance traf[ickers have virtual carte blanche to haul their ~·a res across the United States borders. FEDERAL antinarcotics ofDcials have made elaborate plans to increase their effi ciency in the air and on the water, but budget conscious bureaucrats have cut out this capability. Far this fiscal year i1lone, the Office of Management and Budget bas sliced the Customs budget for these plans from $11.4 million to $3.3 million. This penny.wise policy is preventing narcotics agents from acquiring sophis- ticated tools , including aircraft with H\VE J\1UST undertake a program to special tracking equipment, boats fas! provide CUstoms control of small boat enough to catch smugglers' craft and t1·affic entering United Slates." one 1 k t the d r he d rt "S 1. r sensors o see ou ~ ope runners. o l ocu ents s. mugg 1ng o f h . narcotic gs . b small boats is a T~ drug ig ters are using some elec· serious pro t present, we have no t~nic sensor~ borrow~ from the means of e!fe<'.ting interdiction o( d~ f1ulitary, but find them virtually worth· entering the l:nited States by this~ess. means." "To date, sensors available for boat The high flying dope peddlers operate surveill,~ have been rudimeniary in "'ilh equal freedom , hauling their cargo ~at~., ~ Cnstoms report states. of white powder from J\Iexico and This s1tuaUoo ezists ~ause of the l~k Canada \Yith virtually no opposition.' of de~elopmental •funding and technical , . . capability that has existed for years . ·smuggling by mean~ o~ pnvate within the Custorrui Agency Service." aircraft has grown In a s1tuahon where control of this commerce, for 1echnlcnJ reasons. was not possible," t h e documents said. TJIE HEAVILY publicized seizures of millicn.s of dollars worth of r.arcoties are largely the ~·ork of old-fashioned customs .. . i and narcotics agents at ports o/. else~·here, based on leads from painstak· ingly nurtured infonnants. Arrests or smugglers through random checks of small planes or boats have been rew 3fd infrequent. • Presently, the air-sea fight against drugs is badly fragmented betwern Customs at the Treasury Departmsn and the new Drug Enforcemen l Administralion (DEA) at the Justitt Depanment. A memorandum describitig a meeting last month between O..stoms' air intrusion coordinators and George Brosan, a top Customs enforcement ot- ficial, n1akes cleat that neither agcn<:,Y knows \\'hat the other ls doing. ' THERE ARE about 50 planes of various kinds available at any one tilli to the t1va agencies for air and boat surveillance. But without cooperation betv.·een them through use or informers who signal the departure of a ship~ from some :onely harbor or airport ,_ t~ planes are useless. They cannot "pickc'f· line" the entire border. ' DEA , v.·hich may wind up v.·ith ~ \\'hole program eventually, is too bu~Y reorganizing to take on any new duties, particularly ones as complicated as tHC "Air Intrusion" operation. , The overall mess Is best summed up bf Brosan : ''Both the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Jmmigration and Naturalization Service have token pro- grams. Neither can compare with tl'ie present Customs effort, and p<>Mib1)' some thought ought to be given to com- bining the thre<! programs." ... ,, Safety, But Not Tyranny -. 'i Every Jaw-abiding citizen has a right lo feel safe in his home, and his person - whether on the street, in the park or in his car, And, he has a right lo expect that h! gavemment provide that safety. But last year there were more than 800,000 felony crimes in California. The crime rate has in- creased nearly 200 percent in the past 10 years. Crime is the number one pub- lic concern. Because of that in September, I 9 7 2, Gov. Reaga n named 1 five-member Select Committee on La\\' Enforcement Problems and charged it to develop recommendations on how best lo fight crin1e. After 10 months of digging into the prob- lem. the task rorce has issued Its 164- pagc report. It contains a wide range of significant and far-reaching recom- mendations: -CREATION of a Public Safety Agen- cy to consolidate state law enforcemen t funcOon.s (highway patrol , prl!IOM, emergency services, etc.): -Establi sh the state policy. that criminals who use firearms during a crime must go to prison1 without chance of probation: -Prison should be the general rule rather than the exceptioo, for convicted narcotics peddlers. Conviction f o r possession or sale or llcroin should bring mandatory Imprisonment with little hope of probation; . -ll should be a misdemeanor, without excepllon, for a person to drive a vehicle when his blood alcohol cootcnt ls 0.10 pert"ent or higher, and -911 lhoU!d be the official stalewlde ( RUS WALTON J and local Emergency Telephone Number in case of crime, fire or accident. POJN11NG to the need for criminal jusUce that is swift, certain and strong - but that It ls now slow, uncertain and In· effectual -the Task Force urged reforms to insure speedy trials: -Reclassify minor traffic violation& and shift them from lh~ courts to in- fonna l summary proceduresi -Give priority to cases involving opiates and d~ngerous drugs: -Permit six-member juries for misde- meanors and fcloniet not puntshable by life imprisorunent or i:leatb and -Authorize verdicts by a five-sixth jury ma1or1ty, except lor capital punish- ment, and -Dispose of cues In favor of the defendant unless the matter goes to trial within 60 days. , Jn the area of prison terms and eot· rectional Institutions, the Ta!k Force urged that the state'• lll~ved pr .. batton subsidy pl'Ogram cancelled. The committee 1lso Urged t'work be made mandatory for all prJ iomates , except where security lrements make it impossible •• THE MOST canlN>vcri .. ! rCOQlll· mendatlon calls for rtie abolition or the se>caUed excluslooacy rule. That rule holds that evtdcnco obtained thl'ollg~ II· lopl aca.rcb and ,.liln la inldmilslble In court. True, the rule of exclusion IS ollen med to thwart justice. But, the pnJblem rtSts not so much with the rule as with tho.~ judges who twist It IG coddle th. crimint1l . \ The solution is not to remove that Intl portant citizen potection; the solution ti to establish firm parameters wilh1 which tb:c rule of exclusion can be a piled. It is indeed, the lint and !mmost du~ of government to protect us from thrn who would prey upon us. That's 'vh~ governm ent is all about. But. we mus take care lest the crimes o,. the f~l.on a . replaced by the tyranny of govemme~lt Such a trade is not necessary. And , in t11t pursuit or Justice, it would be •lj dubloos merll. OIAM .. CO.All DAILY PILOT Robm N. W••d, Pul>U..h<r Th"""" Kttlrll, Editor Barbara Kreibidt .Editorial Pag< Editor • •• ~ edftortal :pqe ot the-DaU,y , Pnot ~ to tnform and rflmulate I rtlderli by prncmtinc on this pqe dlvmll!'rCommentary· on topics or t~ ltrtlt ~-ieated columnllta and cartoonit , by provkt\ng a forum tor rudm' lew• and by ~lnr tty ncw'PI 't ophrloN: and fdet.t on + c:urnnt topics. The f.d1tor1ai oo1~ I ol the Oolb> ,P.~t appeor ooly In <ho I pag Opinions ""'1 by the col· ~tor al oqu •t11e•top or Iha ' ICI and cal'100nlst• ad 'etftr . ~ ttitlr own trd ne eodonte-- mmt or 1""11 vi.-by Ille llol" l'Uot -Iii )le - Wednesday, AUiUJI 29, 19?• ' : \ I I I I I . -. • \ Orange Coast ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.JUl'-'.L,.._._,l-.~~ Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 66, NO. 241, 7 SECTIONS, 88 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1973 N TEN CENTS . . . Grand Jury -Probes Progress . . By JOHN ZAu.ER Of flle O.llY Plltf Sl•ff The Orange County Grand Jury is con- ducting an investigation to see if Orange County supervisors are moving fast eoough toward bringing Upper Newport Bay into public ownership, Jt was learned today. Marcia Bents, grand jury foreman , said the purpase or the inquiry Is "to see that the board of supervisors really ac· complishes something" in its efforts to a.cquire the Upper Bay. Mrs. Benl> stressed that , the ln- vesUgatioo 15 part of the grand jury's "ongoing effort to monitor the operations of an phases of county govemmenl "We are not sure at this point whether we will issue a report or not," Mrs. Bents said. "Uthe effort to acquire the bay 15 mov- ing too slowly We Will have something to say," she declared. "If good progress ls being ...made, we may keep quiet," she said, "but we do LA La11ding Mishap 5 Women Hurt As Plane Jolted LOS ANGELES (AP) -Five women were Injured, one critically wilh a broken neck , when a Trans World Airlines Boeing 707 was jolted u lt approached Los Anl•le. lntematlonal Airport. '!'WA ,.d the mishap -y nl&bl Girl Scout,s OK in Mexico After Quake A party of eight Orange Coast Girl Seoul> and their two leaden are safe and sound today in Cuemavaca, Mexico, alter riding out Tuesday's earthquake In Mexico City. I Scout officials ln Orange County learn- ed late Tuesday by telephone that two of the girls actually slept through the quake. "1bey are all just tme, 11 Girl Seoul !pokesman Mrs. Eva Sachs declared to- day, praising efforts by local Pacific Telephone Company personnel to make connectioos to the quake damage zone. "One operator worked on our call for several hours," she explained. She said officials talked with Mrs. Edward Spurgeon , or Cypress, who ac· comJ>"Dle<f th~ gtrlno Menco-aloog with Mra. Michael Welt of Newport Beach. She said the party, bound for an ln- tunatiooal gathering at Our cabana, a (Ste SCOOTS, Pop l) Firemen Rescue ' Chewing Tot .. A Palm Springs couple cut short a visit to the Harbor Area TUesday night after their infant daughter w .a s dlscovercd munching away on pieces ol old wire screenin~ she tore from a door. was caused by mechanical fallure or air turbulence. An investigation ls under way. Jo passenaer, Ann Clement.. of San Diep, said "'For a minute, It lelt like we w.,.. at the Promised Land. ''.There were peopJe bebiDd me ~. We were llYUfr throalh the air. We were bounced around qulle a bit." The women, lncl.udlng two stewardews, were standing up when the plane shook, 'l'W A said. Marge Payette of Huntington Beach, was in critical coodltion with a broken neck at Centlnela Valley Commuolty Hospltal. Two others wero bospltallzed with lesser injuries. They were identified as Ellen Hargitay, 31, of Los Angeles, with a 1pralned band and 1 possible back In- jury, and Te-sun Hse, 18, of Taiwan, with a broken jaw and a possible fractured skull. '!be si.wardesses were trealed at the hospital and released. 'Ibey were iden- tified as Ellen Cbapiro, 21, of llonolulu, and Betty Gray, 30, of Sleamboat Spring$, Colo. Hospital spokesmaD said both suffered lower back Injuries. United Press JnternaUonal quoted one passenger saying there was a lot of "praying out lou~" "Pe<iple were touching the celling and coming down," said John Adams of Norton, Mass. "It was really chaos." "A couple of people fell very badly. -nie-people who were not in their ~ats, they were the ones who ,got hurt." Adams said there WU 00 warning to fasten 1e1t belts. He added there wu "no panic." 'lbe spokelman said 1 military doctor traveling oo lllgbt 712 from Hon1 Kong via Okinawa, Taiwan, Guam and Hmoiulu aided the inJured before the jeUlner landed. There were 132 paaeogers and nine crew members aboard the flight, scheduled to tennlnate in San Francisco. Passengers were sent to ·San Franclsco aboard other planes. ' TWA spokesman Mike Leon said the cause of the accident 11cou.1d have been one of two things -clear air turbolence or a mechanical malfuoctloo In perts of the tail. want to make sure that the county keeps up the effl>tl to bring the bay Into public ownership." 'lbe Irvine Company last April offered its Upper Bay holdings to whatever public agencies are interested in them, saying terms of a land sale or trade could be worked out later. The company said it was willing to ac- cept any reasonable tenns of purchase and stressed that it hoped the public could assume possession of the Upper Bay as aoon as possible. A joint federal , State, county and city agency -the Upper Bay Field Com- mittee -has been meeting regularly in an effort to work out an agreement with the company. There bas been little !ap¥ible progress during those Jive months, however. Tbe offer bad been made under the Uu·eat oh prescriptive rights lawsuit by the county. Mrs. Bents acknowledged Iba! there have been complalnts that certain ' Thu111hed Down Officer Bails Out Prospector A strapping, bearded gold prospector from Hope, Alaska, thumbed a ride south out of Newport Beach for San Diego Tuesday to see a sister facing a leg amputation, after a short stopover iD )ail. HE BIT the road with 54 cents in ready money and two mining claims in his pocket after a syriipathetic policeman loaned him $2 to make up the differ· ence in an $8 fine. Patrick W. J..,.., 24, standing six feet, three Inches tall and weighing 217 pounds, was formally arrested and -ed oo a charge · of bitcbbiilng In tbe roadway. Patrolman Bob Hardy claimed Jooes was standing In traffic lanes in the 3900 block of West <;oast lfigbway, holding up ~ •Igo saying: San Diego. THE On!Cllll claimed 10Veral can· llld 0to;-''ilrolmd ;tliio ll!lner. Officer 11.anb said Jooes, who bad only $11.51 In c8sh, carried DO fonnal identilicaliOG and' bad DO -local lies, auch u refaUves In the area, so hewastakao·to~ < • ....., A-Utborttlel Were coocemed 1boul Jones' failure tp. carry a drim-'i license, dra!J card 'I' ..._actepAl>le ldentlflcoUon. "BE IWI two $20 travelei'1 cliecn, a bancb of papers and a couple ol mining clabns with the name 'Patrick W. Jooes," said another pair~ who asked not to be identified. "I've been to Alaska," he contlnued. "And the people there have a par- ticular type of personality. He seemed to be a good guy. "Doo't print thls.," said the sympathetic officer, "but I loaned him a couple of bucks to make bail." Newport Airport Criticism Disputed by ·Bresnahan By L PETER KRJEG Of 1111 DlllY PIM Stiff Orange County SUpervisors did conduct a public hearing on proposals to make improvements to the terminal at Orange County Airport, airport director Robert Bresoahan said today. Newport Beach councilmen Monday night criticized the supervisors for ap- pn>Ving the changes and "demanded" DELINQUENT T A.X LIST PUBLISHED The deadline for property t a x payments has co~ and gone and hun- dred.! of Orange Coast property owners bave yet to pay the piper. Oran«e County Tax Collector Robert Citron's list of delliiquent 1,xpay.n ap- pears on Pages :la and Z7 of ioday's Daily Pilot. they conduct a hearing before obtaining building permits. NeWport Beach missed its opportunity to speak out against the improvements, however, Bresnahan said, when the city failed to voice its opposition at a June 22 hearing on the airport budget. "The items were in the budget and there was no opposition at the hearing," Bresnahan pointed out., Re said approval of the budget came Aug. 21 Hat a public .meeting" where no opposition was.expressed. Bresnahan also said the county doe!n 't even COll5ider the changes to be "airport expansion." "We are enclosing an area that has been uaed all aloog since last February," he said. "It's a holding area for passengers who have been searched -we call It 'sterillzed,' -ap<i ... w~n it rain.t we can't have these people standing outdoors~11 be said. · He said the airport is leaving itself (Ste :uRPoRT, Page l) Desiree Manansala, 8 months, was given first aid at the scene, 4302 E. Coast Hil!iway. Corona de! Mar, by Newport Beach Fire Department personnel until an ambulance arrived. Flremen treated her for mouth cul!, while doctors at Hoag Memorial Hospital f!COl!lmendeo the lltUe girl ~ adri>llttd (or -rvatton In ca.e obe .... uowed IDY of the bit& of rotten melal ocreeo. Surplus Land Up for Sale Kospltal oroclals said today that Mr. and Mrs. Engrllllo ManaMaia preferred to take her directly home to their family physician In Palm Springs. COUCH, CHA.IR DRAW RESPONSE Success stories are not aa nno aa .10ll mlghl think. Look at this one: * 6' COUCH & matching • cfullr. Gold & white. Almost ' new. $50, (Phone No.) This Daily Pilot advertiser had 1$ call! ll)e first night! The Item w11 told, of coune, and another succna story wu Written. Our Ad·vitor con ltdp you write your own success story. Dial lier dlrect- 6i:wrl8. First Bids for Defunct Freeway Acreage Due Nov. 6 1be State of C.lUomia wlll oell 21 parcels of land purclwed !or the now- delllncl Pacific Coast r...way In Newport Beach within the next few mooibs, It was .disclooed 'l\lead1y. 'lbe property, moeUy lllncle-famlly homes alone Kings Rood, was purcllased between 1"5 Ind 1971 for about $11.4 million. State officl1ll estimated that dispostng ol it through ,..led blda would probably bring aboug 110 million to the treasury cit the state Department ol Transportation, wtdch now owns the property. 11\e first sale or two P"l'Cels will take place Nov. 8 at Newport Beach City Hall. The dlsclOIUJ'H were made Tuesday In Se.Illa Ana at a """Ung of the Calllomla Commission on Government Operation 'Ind Economy. • 'lbe Little Hoover Commlaslon, es the state commisdoo is more commonly known, bas held four meetings in lha past three years to pross the c.Jlfornla Highway Commission to dispose of surplus freeway11and as aoon as possl.ble. "We held the """ting to demonstrate to the Utile -Commission that w. are aelling off our surplus land as fast u we reuonably can'" said Murray Stonn, assistant n>ad co~oner ol Orange Coun(y. ' "U the Little Hoover Commission were not convinced of our good lnlentl9n, It mlgbt pressun! us ' into oelllng ofl too much land too aoon, 11 Storm adcled. Newport Beach Mayor ·Donald A. Mc!Mls told mtmben of the commission that the city was working ,wtth the QOUOIY to ldenUJy which of 31 additional parcels of fl'eeway land might 1loo ba ourplus. "We are coming near to maklna oome I decisions about how much o! the re- maining land •1ll be needed for transportation ," MclMis said. "But before we sell !be land, we want to be very sure that It ls realty surplus.11 Nalhan Shapell, a commission member, esp ... ssed • criticl.m or the Highway Commlsoion IOI' buying so moch freeway land In the first place. "Newport Beach Is an example of what Is going on all over t'hc .... state,'' Shape:U complained. _ He said that since 1965, Ute state has acquired 112.1 million worth of property that may now be worth up to l20 million. Annual laxes on Iha~ he said, would amount lo $180~000 Ir It were on the tax rolls. But since It wa• publicly owned, he said, that revenue was lost. He aatd that throughout the •tale there (Ste SURPLUS, Paje l) ' on Upper Bay supervisors have employed delaying tac· tics and said the "Grand Jury's en- vironmental committee is following them up. She said infonnation has been re· Q\;ested from a number of sources in an effort to evaluate the efforts of the board of supervisors. Fiflh District Supervisor R on a I d Caspers of Newport Beach, chairman of the county board, is one of those the Grand Jury asked to comment on the progress of negotiations. Nixon Gets Five Days For ·Appeal \l'ASIDNGTON (AP) -The Watergale trihl judge this afternoon ordered Prest~ dent Nixon to tum over for the judge's • private inspection tapes subpoenaed by the Watergate prosecutor, but stayed the order for, fiye days to pennit appeal. u.s. District Court Judge Joi¥> J. Slrlca said in a rullllg ~ to be ap- pealed tbat Nixon mlist "pr°'1UCe forthwith !or the coart'1.examlnatlon In camera••·the tape recordings of. Nixon's conVll'l8Uons with _.,y, aides ·fn!pijcated in the Wa(Fgate inyeotlgation. Sfrlca said be would not !um over. to a graild Jiiii matcrial In lhO tapes he found to be privileged, but said he Couldn't decide what was privileged without get· Ung the ta pes. He ordered the five-day delay and add- ed that be would extend the stay indefi~ nately if the completion of appeals re- quired lt. Sirica's order was the first time in history that a judge bas commanded a President to produce materials over his objections. Nixon bas claimed that to cfulclose the documents and tapes would violate the confidentiality of t h e presidency. Sirica called his course a middle ground betweeo the two conllicting claims of the President and of the Watergate prosecutors, who want to ex~ amine the tapes in their investigation of the Watergate affair. · He said that without discrediting the strer$h1 of the Watergate grand jury•s claim tO' the infonnation he could not "as matters now stand, rule that the present claim of privilege is invalid." Instead, Sirica said in a 2J.page opinion whi.ch accompanied his order for the tapes, "the court bas attempted to walk the middle ground between a failure to decide the quesUon of privilege at oo.e extreme, and a wholesale delivery of tapes to the graod jury at the other." Sirica put bis dilemma plainly: "The (Ste TAPF3, Poge Z) * * * White House Has No Comment Ori Sirica's Ruling The Western White House today had no iJl"!piediate comm ent on the ruling by U.S. District Judge John Slrica that President Nixon must relinquish all the secret tapes he has made. in the White House. First won! of the federal court ruling on the tapes came as Deputy Press Secretary Ge.raid Warren was in lhe midst of a routine press briefing. Reporters interrupted Warren to give him the news of the ruling, considered a major blow to Pres.ldent N i x o n ' s philosophy of coofldentlallty In the White House. "This fits a policy that I bave set for bricfmgs where I caMot comment on a matter with which we are not familiar," said Warren. .. Despi1' repeated attanpts by reporters to M"eSl a comment, Warren remained !inn and would only commit himaeU to an advisory late this afternoon as to whc~r the While JJouse would have any comment at all. EssenUally, he promised only a statement on whether the White House will comment at all. Thus far, tbe Whit< House bas stated only that tt would heed "a definitive court ruling" on the ls.sue of the tapes' release. The statement bas Implied the only ruling the government would honor would be a fillltl one from the U.S. Supreme Court. Caspers said he Is preparing a written commentary containing his views. but wouJd not comment directly on the re-- quest. Ho~·ever, he did express "concern'' over what he called "footdra gging" by tht: board -.s a whole. "All the public agencies on the Field Committee are eager to get going," Caspers said. "It is only the County of Orange that doesn't seem to be in a hur- ry." Nixon Takes Freeway Trip President Nixon went for another drive on the California freeways, accompanied by his wife, Pat, and daughter, Tricia Nixon C:Ox. Escorted by two Secret Service cars, the Nixoos stopped Tuesday for an hour at Red Beach inside the Camp Pendleton Marine base. The Western White House did not announce the President's excursion ~til the Nixons had arrived at the beach. A news media car that attempted to follow them found Its path blocked by the Secret Service. 0 Tbere are certain timea when the President wanll to•be private," leputy preas oeeretary Gera1t1 L. Warren told reporters. Federal Funds Given, Newport For View Park Orange County Supervisors Tuesday gave Newport Beach fU)(),000 to spend for acquisition of a view park that city coun- cilmen haven't yet decided they want lo buy. The appropriatioo came as part ()( federal revenue-sharing money doled out by supervisors to expand Inspiration Point view park in Corona del Mar. They also appropriated $4(1,000 for a "linear wharf park" bordering the Rhine Channel in Old Newport. The city had requested both ap- propriations. City Manager Robert L. Wynn said to- day t~at he doesn 't know what the COWl· cil's next move will be. "We'll probably wail until we get a let· ter from the county that will indicate what, if any , conditions are attached. to the money,'' Wynn said. He quickly added, however, "that I want to emphasize the city has not taken a position to acquire that property." Wynn pointed out that the only "possi- (S.. VIEW PARK, Page Z) Plot Investigated SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Two police officers ,are in New Orie.an! checking 15 persons arrested in the investigation of an assassination plot against President Nixon for possible links with a 1971 police station ambu,,h here, Lt. Charles Ellis said Tuesday. £Gui Weather 1be sun will peek through those low clouds Th~ morning leav- ing tbe rest of the day fairly SUMy. Highs will range from 70 at the beaches to 75 lnlatld. Overnight lows 63-65. INSIDt.: TODA\' It was a gau time in Nno York ~en though theu lo.st miler· ably. The homosexual commv.- 1tit11 played the police deport. ment in a fT'Undl.V ba.s•ball game to better their image. Storu ?age 7. j • ~ UAIL Y PILOl N Wrdnrsday, ALM;uSl iq, 1911 "lexico Disaster Meadowlark: 500 Die; More Funds Get Feared in Quake Board Okay ~JEX I CO CITY (UJ>I i -T~e death toll in Tuesday 's earthquake mounted stcadi· Jy todRy, and by dawn the ~1exican presidency '''as reporting "about 500 dead ." One P.1exico City newspaper put the toll at 924. The P.1ellco City daily El Heraldo said 600 died. Other counts ran betwttn 400 and 600. At least 2,000 persons \\'ere reported in· ·ju red and tens of thousands left homeless. As da\vn broke, surv ivors dug through the ruins or Lhelr homes. The dead \\"ere laid out in private homes. local hospitals and blankels under the streets. Some · ""ere still under the debris. The death toll rose as report s ca me in from ouUying villages and crews corr Lim.led to clear the wreckage. Rain ripped the area Tuesday night but cleared by dawn. Res idents took little ~notice of it. Jn the quake-stricken area surrounding 'the 18.700-foot Orizaba volcano. debris s tood still scattered on the streets of seve ral large towns and a multitude of villages. Ambulances ran from the Ori1.8ba Valley, Cludad Serdan and other heavily· hit areas to hospitals In nearby state From P .. e 1 TAPES ... court is simply unable to decide !he ques- tion of privilege without inspecting the tapes." Sirica said that if privileged and un· privileged material are intemtingled, ooly unprivileged material may be taken out and transmitted to the grand jury. On the other hand, he continued, "if privileged and unplivlleged evidence are so tnertrtcably connected that separa- tion become! Impossible, the whole must be privileged and no disclosure made to the grand jury." ff It Is apparent that the tapes are ir- relevant to the lnvestlgatlon, .. or that for state reasons they cannot be int~ duced into the case, the subpoena . . . would be useless ." he said. . "But if thl.s is not apperent, if they , may be importtint to the Investigation, if they may he safely heard by the grand jury, If only in part, would It not he a blot on the P81• which r.cords the judicial proceedings of this country, If in a case of such aertous Import as this , the court did not at least call for an inspection of the evidence in chamber?" Sirica asked in concluding his opinlon. Hours be!ore Sirica's ruling, White House and Senate lawyers filed: peper1 in the parallel su it brought ~Y the Senate \\'atergate committee, which also seeks the tapes . · \\'bile House attorneys argued that a 1 1ederal court has no jurisdiction lo de- cide whether Nixon must tum the tapes over to the Senate panel. They argued that the request of the Senate committee "constitutes an un- constitutional attempt to interlere with the oonfldentlality" of the Pre!ident's ronverutions with hls advisers. Minutes after the White H~se filing, the Senate committee filed its own lengthy brief outlining why the jucjge should order Nixon to tum over the tapes and documents related to the lnvesti· gation . From P .. e 1 SURPLUS ... is an estimated $200 mill ion worth of surplus freeway land off the la:t rolls and not aubject to taxation. Wes Fuller, chairman of the Highway Commission , replied that the land was bought in expectation that a freeway \VOufd be built . "\Ve did not foresee that the freewa y would he killed," he said. "If It had ll<lt been. to buy the land now could cost '"·ice as much.'. In addillon. he noted, the state prob- •bly \\·ould be able to sell the land at a profit. O~ANCJI COAIT H DAILY PILOT Tll1 ,Qi"11111 Co.It D"IL Y PILOT, wlflll wl\IQI II c.,.Wllll'I' flll Ntw1.f>r.s1, 1$ Pllbll1MO by 1111 Orl'llH' C0.11 PuoU5111,,., ~~y. Sep.. ,.,, .. ltlon1 1r1 ~llhed, MW•r '~""""' Frid•~. for Co111 Mf1t, Nf'W!'911 le•dl. H""ll"Cflon 8f6cil/Fo;,.,111., Vl llt'f', Ltgu ... eu,11, l•~l'11/$addltMC11 1Nll Sin CltrTWflte/ Jin Jv.1n Cepl•!""' A •1"111• ~loti•I Miiion ii ~l'll'lfd l•tu'11•,1 ..i ~~1. f T"-llf'lnc:fpel "111111111"" 1'-111 11 ti UO Wnl ••r SlfHI. Co1t1 MIU, ,11/fotftlf , flll'e. lt•b•'' N. W1M 'rttY"'I •11111 'vllll~t J•c• It, C\lrlt't' lllCt ,, .. ~1111 111111 GtMrtl MIMt., Thel'I•• K•t•ll lettof Th•m11 A. lrih1111h i111 Mll\atlnl Edlftr L. ''''r Ktl11 Htwlll't IHdl City .,._ Hew,.,. .... OMd JJJJ New1119f't .. •l••M4 M1/ll1t1 AJ4r1tt1 ,,0 , I•• 1171, fJ"J --C'tll• .--i »D Wftl a., 'ltrttt U!ll-1..01 tn """'' A"""" 11\11\lll!flwl .. IOI HllJ hNfl ltul-r.= &11t Cl.-fl l •t Morltl •1 GllftfM , ........ (Jl4J '4J-4JJ1 Cl..., ...... , ..... '4W71 ~'""''· 0 11, °''"°' ""'' '-'111111111 ~., ,.. -• ..,.... lllvth'I"""" .. lllt\tl • INIMf ti' ffY'frf~I """' _., " ~ wJ"'"t W*lll 1111' --" -"'""' --· flCtlW clMI ....... NII #I Cttfl Mftil, t•"""*' ~'-' .. t.mtr a.u ="'J • -n a 11 M111tt11¥1 11111...,., n... • M "Wl•lr. • ... capitals. Traftlc In the area \~·as packed with volunteer cars carrying the Red Cross baMcr. At the town hall in Ori zaba officials l\'ert coordinating reports from outlying villages . 11lOSe who lost their homes stood in line outside the building "'ailing to repor1 the losses. \\'averly Person of the Nationa l Earth- quake Inlormation Center in Boulder, Colo .• said the quake appeared to be the worst in hiexlco's modern history in terms of Joss of life. Th e early morning quake, centered In h1ult lines deep under ~1exlco's moun· tainous central spine, registered 7 on the Richter Scale -more powerful than Lhe Deeember quake in Managua, Nicaragua that killed 5,000 persons. The Managua quake had a Richte r intensity of 6.2. Hardest hit In Tuesday's quake was the town or Orizaba, caught in the epicenter of the giant temblor. • Granting the largest chunk ~ federal revenue-sharing funds ye~~i~ to any Orange County commlU)ll County Board of Supervisors , y 11ve $600,000 to lluntington Beach ror the purchue ol bfe•dowlark. Goll CQw"se,·'. ' The sum also wUI belp )luy a c.on!)!inr area adjacent to the tree-dotted. ii.hole course near Meadowlark Af.I!irit. 'nle only grant a~ Hun· tington Beach's d~rilli '~-~ard or supervisors ' allocation sessrL'TI Tuesday was SSOO,<XN'l earmarked for !he Placen- tia Park in Fullerton. The "county Harbors. Beaches and Parks Commission had r:ecommended $250,000 he alloted to Huntington Beach for the golr course purchase. , Huntington Beach City AdministratOJ," David Rowlands said the clty ha.s until Sept. 23 to develop a plan to purchase the 110-acre parcel. He told supervlsors the city will use some of its O\\'n revenue-sharing funds and is considering issuing revenue bol'Jds, based on projected receipts of the popular golf course. ' A three-story apartment building in the community of 50,000 persons 150 miles east-southeast of Mexico City collapsed , killing more than 100 tenants asleep In- side. · U,I T•l ..... N MOTHER SITS IN RUINS OF HIR ORIZABA HOME AFTER THREI! OF HER CHILDREN PERISHED M111lv1 Killer E1rthqu1ke Rumbl•s-Along Ancient F1ult In Mount1lnous Central Mexico Property owners had been approached by housing developers. but ga ve the cit)! the option of obtaining the Meadowlark facility as a public recreation area. Mexican President Luis Echevenia wu en route today to the devastated zone around Orizaba. Thousand were left without homes. Red Cross officials said about 800 persons "'ere injured. They estimated 100 per.sons died in Quecholac in Puebla State; 80 in Ciudad Cerdan, 178 in Orizaba, two in Pueb la and two in Cordoba in Veracruz State. Others died In scattered areas. Officials said Puebla, Mexico's fourth largest city wilh a popu lation of 550,000 located 80 miles southeast of !\texlco Ci· ty. al.so suffered extensive damage. UPI reported Timothy Be'!l' reported from Orizaba that the Swiss-style city was half destroyed as score!: of buildings toppled, burying occupants in nibble. Hundreds were left homeless. Mayor Humberto Guitierrez said the city's 350- bed hospital was badly damaged. Schools were demolished. Agnew Daught.er Returns Home Aft.er Threats WASHINGTON (UPI) -Vice Presi- dent Spiro T. Agnew's daughter Susan cut short a voyage on the hospital ship USS HOpe because of threats on her life made in Brazil, an Agnew spokesman said today . Marsh Thomson, the vice president's press secretary, said the family made "a judgment . . . not lo lake any further risks" and arranged to have the 26-year· old ~flss Agnew i"ttum to Washington. htiss Agnew, who sailed aboard the Hope in February with the intention of returning in December, worked with audio-visual education equipment. "There had been threats on her li fe down there (Br azil) and although the Brazilians thought they could take care of the situation and the vice president has expressed confidence In the ability of the Brazilian government to provide necessary security, as a father he wanted to take the prudent measure of bringing .her closer to home." Thomson ·said. The Washington Star-News reported to- day that Dr. William Walsh, who founded Project Hope under which tM ship sails on humanitarian missions, aald both he and Miss Agnew receJved several threats -including one last week that could not be lgoored. "This \vas a threat which we felt was more serious and American in telligence agreed \Yilh Brazilian intelligence," \\'alsh told 1he Star.News. Mesan to Face Fourth Child Molesting Rap Police have addM a fourth child molesUng charge to the groy,·lng booking record or Joseph Reitano, a 60-yeaMld Co.sta Mesan currently being held in lieu of $50,<XN'l bail . Costa ~1esa police allege fhnt Reitano, 1vho lists his occupation as watch repairman, participated In sexual rela· lions with an a.year-old boy. The boy Is the brother or a IG-year-<>ld girl Reitano allegedly molested in a C..ta Mesa motel , police aald. De...Uve George Wi190n uid thlo brings lo 17 the Individual counts or child molestation w1th whid! Reitano will be formally chargpcl In Harbor Judicial Dlslrlct Court. Reitano will also be accused of molc1tlng two other Coma Meaa girls, both II. Known for his past battles with law en· forcement agencies over a 11 e g e d I y pornographic books and movies, Reltano. 184$ Anaheim Ave., was arrested on the first moltitation char1te Aug. !I. After arraignment on the lint charge, Rtltano was released on his own rccoenJwice. ( ffonaes Destroyed Milk at School To Take Jump; Program Ended · Rowlands said 100,000 people use the golr course each year and that one-thi,ird of it is an Important archeological site. lie also agreed that part of the CQUr.se could be used for bicycle !rails. . Survivors of Earthquake Other projects approved, as recot.Jf" mended by the county Harbors, Bea~ and Parks Commission, include $200 for the Fountain Valley Recrea n Numbed by Ruins, Dead Schools along the Orange Coast wiH have to raise the price of milk sold by the carton when stadents return to classeS~thlJ fall. Center. , Also alloted was $100,000 for Laeuna'1 fl.1ain Beach : $100,000 for a view park in Corona de! Mar and $40,000 for a wharf park in Newport Beach. ORIZABA, Mexico (UPI) -A gray- haired woman dug through a waist-hlgh rock pile that used to be her home. A middle-aged man watched silently while wreckers tore at huge concrete slabs that cover a whole city block. lt was an aparUnent house before the quake. The man, Miguel Angel Cisneros, U!ed to live there. His sis~r died thefe. Orlzabi ls in a dlze, like the woman digging through the rocks, still not ·1how· ing emotion. The town. nestled in a Jreen alpine valley in the Mexican Sierra Madre mountains, wa!I hit Tuesday by the worst of a violent earthquake that rocked most of central Mexico. There was no electric power. No drink· ing water. Traffic ran In detours around the streets. filled with fallen bricks, adobe , wood , cement and glass. People gathered in darkened cares and on street cornrs. "Where were you when it hit?" they asked each other. Many stood to watch the crews clear the wreckage. Cranes and bulldozers helped with the big pieces. One group tied a cable to a damaged building. They pulled until the From Page 1 AIRPORT ... open to lawsuits by persons secured in these areas who are also subjected to "jet blasts and a high level of nol11e" from planes taking off nearby. "Bes.ides, we're operating half-il- legally,'1 he said, "the holding area Is right below the balcony outside the upstairs restaurant and somebody could drop a gun to a passenger down below. "Once passengers have been sterilized, they should not have any opportunity ror contact with non-passengers," he said. Bresnahan also Pointed 'out that the search of passengers was mandated by federal Jaw and he said that mandate has also forced him lo find new office space so offices for security personnel can be enlarged. "Right now we've got 10 men crowded into a five·foot by nine-loot office," he said. The airport chief said he ha! received formal complaints from the employts' a1soclatlon because of It. Bresnahan said it would be impossible to do as other airports do, screen all non- passengers who enter holding areas. "\Ve don't have that kind or roon1," he said. Bresnahan rerused to com1nent on a personal attack hurled at him Monday by Newport Beach Vice ~fayor Howard Rogers. Rogtrs had charged that Bresnahan v.·anls his office moved because it is in public view and he said Bresnahan has "a vanity problem." Bresnah an plans to reloca te his oHices to the Mission Beechcraft buiding just north of the airport terminal on MacArthur Boulevard. "I don't think they need to makt more room for passengers Just ao be nn move his office closer to the Alrporter IM 10 It can he bandier for lunch and cocktails," Ro&en said. New Cabinet Foru1ed - SANTIAGO, Chile I UPI ) -PrHident Salvador Allende, plagued by middle clan opposition, mllllary unre1t and labor llrlkes, formed a MW criai• cabinet Tuesday nleht and threatened "drastic musurt.1" 111bilt the op- position pre,.. Allende oworo in hlo IOth ublntt In moro than two yuro In office. 'val! tumbled down in a cloud of dust. Occasionally, a Red CJ'OSi ambulance •ped off, whining, carrying another body taken from underneath the wreckage. The Packard Building, a three-story apartment complex, was once a landm ark here on the city's main avenue. tialf of it collapsed. Its 100 sleeping oc- cupants ·were all feared dead. Cisneros shared a firs t floor apartment with his sister. He spent Tuesday night with hi s mother, In her house, and Uved. His sister died beneath the concrete. "That'• my stuff they're taklne oot now," he said, pointing to a squashed mattress. '1That's where they found my sister." He stared at the wreckage with dry, unbil11klng eJIOs. An ambulance was called as wreckers pulled out a body. "That's the lawyer, I foget his name. But he was one of my neighbors." FromP .. el SCOUTS ... The U.S. Department of Agriculture has suspended its schoo l lunch milk subsidy program because Congress hasn 'l yet appropriated money to buy the milk. The cancellation will affect about 40 From Page J VIEW PARK • • • million children nation-wide, federal of· lion" ·taken by counciln1cn came two ficials estimated. weeks ago when they declared they will Only schools l\'hich operate "ith a not try to seize the property thrwgb "type A" federally-subsidized hmch pro-prescriptive right.s litigati911. gram will no Jong~r get the subsidy, Homeowners near the view park hive which has a\lleraged three centi p<n' pint been puihing for the acquisition of tht of milk. ll\'O kU -estimated to be v.-orth about Schools that have no lunch program at $100,000 each -and are asking their all will continue to get mftk subsidies. lawyer to get the California Attorney 'Fhis involves about six mlDJon students. General's office to consider filing a Those aubaldie!I will be paid for out of lawsuit claiming the title to the Jots hai; 115 mllllon approved by Congress under a reverted lo Ulf publl~ ~use o1 "continuing reaolution'' prior to summer unimpeded we over the past years. recess , agriculture officlall said. On top of the fact that councilmen haven't made a final determina tion on Action hasn't been taken on the acquisition of lhe Jots, WYM aald he isn't agriculture department's full fiscal 1974 sure where the city would gel its share of appropriation. A '97 million allocation Is the money. pending In a conference committee. He said, if councilmen do decide to buy "When Congresa provides the money the lots, they might ask the atate for for this program, we wUl reconsider our money or they could appropriate funds action," said a department official. from the city treasury, likely from the But children won't have any problems building excise tax fund . if they buy the ''nutritious type A'' lunch, 1be Rhine Channel Wharf project Ls a Girl Scout hospital in Cuemavaca, stayed a number of Orange Coast school of. joint effort by the city and local in Mexico City until travel was declared ficl als polled said today. businessmen to .enhance the waterfront safe. The regu1ar, subsidized meal includes area along Udo Park Drive between the The Girl Scout party including Terri milk as part of the menu and won't cost new Cannery Restaurant and the Bergman and Sandra Kleeman, Costa any more this fall , said a rood servlCi! remodeled Sea Shanty Restaurant. Mesa; h1ary Lou Horner. Tustin; representative in the Newport·Mesa Parka, Beaches and Recreation Direc· Barbara Lindsay, Midway City; Jill Unified School District. tor Calvin Stewart said this morning that Black, Los Alamitos; Karen Kalar, Milk costs the dlstrlet 9.S cenlll per pint the city will spend a total of $8$,000, l~ Garden Grove. and Susan Thomas and and has been sold for !llx cents, with the eluding the '4(),000 from the county, tO Judy Leonard, Cypress, left Aug. 23 and federal government paying the dif· build a boardwalk and Instal l benches is due back a week from today. rerence, th e Newport-Mesa Di.strict of-and landscaping between the te!ltauranu. They are hlBh school..age Girl Scouts ficlal explained . He said the overall cost of the Im- selec ted from among applicants seeking If a child buys the milk a la carte, he provement project uruns into the several to represent Orange C.Ounty at this year's or she will haev to pay 10 cents for it thls hundred thou.sand dollars," which, he international gathering at Cue rn avaca. fall. said, businessmen In the area are paylng,. ---~~~~~~~~~~~~ OPIN ' ... I I Sox-Wickdry-Cotton Tube-Tennis Shoes-8asketball-T ennis Football-All Purpose Gym Pants-Reversible T-Shirts Warmup Sutts SWeat Suits T annis Rackets Handball Glaves Racquetball Racquets Speedo Swim Suits Open 9 to 6 Closed Sundays I BasketbaOs Yoney Bans & Nets Footballs Play1roun11 Bans Duckf eet Fins Water Wonder Boards Skate Boards Back Packs Slee~111 Bzgs Dock Bags Raleigh Bikes Repairing-nm-Tubes • CLOSID SUNDAY ' I i l I \ I ' I ri lledayan Innocent Througl1 h1 sanity SAN RAFAEL (AP) -A jury bas found 22-year~Jd Brent Bedayan innocent by reason of insanity of shotgun- ning a Mill Valley family to death last October. 0 1t was clear that Bedayan did have a psycholic delusion about Danny and there was some question about his father as the en!orcer," said jury foreman Dale A. Stopp after announcing the verdict Tues- day. "BUT \VE couldn't find any clearcu t reason why he killed Ruth. That's when we found him insane," Stopp said. Bedayan had been accused ol killing Melvin Schallock, 61, bis wife Ruth, 56, and his son, Daniel, 20, last March 16 and then burning their home. this was not an in.sane act by a young boy wbo hOd nothing to gain, then there are no legally Insane people in the slate of California . "I want to thank you for Mr. and Mrs! Bedayan" Cox said. "I don't think Brent can thank you now." "THE COURT'S irmructions to the jury direcled them to return a verdJct of voluntary manslaughter," Bales said. "The results would have been different if the judge had given them my fekm.y-n1urder instructions, which would have made the theory of diminished capacity irrelevant." In the 20 days o( trial testimony, Bedayan was label- ed a paranoid-schizophrenic by five psychiatrists. They said he had delusions of pain im- pulses sent telepbatically from Daniel Schallock and saw the elder Schallock as a gangland- type "enforcer." U~IT~t Biking for Ftands Eighteen bicycle riders from Sacramento, between 15 and 22 years-old, are bik· ing across the country. The group, pedaling past the Capitol Tuesday, hopes to forestall curtailment of Red Cross services in Sacramento. . ' Wednesday, August 29, 1973 DAILY PtLOT $ 'Owes $4 .4 Million' Hughes Files Counter suit Against . Ex-chief Mahet1 LOS ANGELES (AP ) -At- torneys for Howard Hughes contend that Robert A. Maheu, the deposed chief of Hughes' Nevada empire, owes the recluse billionaire more lhan $4.4 mJIUon. Hughes' Summa Corp. at- •tomeys lisled the sum "'hen they gave notice in federal court Tuesday that they would file a counter<omplaint Sept. 17 against P..1aheu. who is seek- ing $13.7 million damages in a libel suit against Hughes Tool Co. i\tAJIEU FILED his suit in federal court two months after the January 1971 telephonic Dead Fire Fighter's Ashes To Be Spread SACRAMENTO (AP ) -The ashes of a 21-year-old San Diegoan who died fighting a fire in the mountainous Big Sur area will be scattered in that same region by his fellow fire fi ghters, a s t a t e spokesman said. corpsmen conduct an evening n1emorial service in his honor in the Big Sur State Park, O'Neal said. He reported Hyme's mother requested the action. news conference by a mad who said he was Hugb9. h1aheu said he was libeled! "'hen the man explained th& reas on s ror Maheu's discharge. ~·taheu's suit is scheduled to come to trial before U:S. District Court Judge Harry Pregerson Oct. 23. ~ Prcgerson requested the ac- counting or funds which at· tomeys ror Hughes' Stmuha Corp . contend are owed to Hughes by Maheu. SUl\fMA CORP. ·is the ' wholly owned Hughes fitm which holds title to Hughes\ Las Vegas ho~ings. 1 The seven-woman, five-ma n jury deliberated a little over four hours Tuesday before finding Bedayan legally insane. The same jury had convicted Bcdayan on three counts or voluntary manslaughter ~fon­ day evening in the "guilt" phase of the trial. Kidnnped 11-yoor-old Home Again Jack O'Neal. sp<>kesman for the state Departmenl of Conservation, said Tuesdav the ashes of Danny Hyme will Hyme worked for the co rps for 14 months and was based at the slate agency's Los Osos Cente r near San Luis Obispo before h.is death Sunday. The court filing says Maheu ow es Hughe s $4,458,474.;1;8.. That sum includes $2,120,000 paid Maheu when he w.as Hughes' top executive ~n Nevada from 1967 to 1970. ; 1 Maheu's attorney, Morton Galane, said in Las Vegas that Maheu would not comment. ' WJIEN MARIN County Dist. Atty. Bruce Bales asked Tues- day that lhe jury be polled, each member affirmed the in- nocent verdict by reasons of insanity on all three counts. h-farin Q>unty S u p e r I o r Court Judge Henry J . Broderick immediately turned Bedayan over to the state Department of M e n t a I Hygiene for transfer to a California mental facility. He called the verdict "a sound result in the case." BefDn! they bet!~-· '1elibcra- tions. Bales had tc' he jurors that "at the critical moment, Brent Bedayan could have stopped. But he consciously chose not to." BEDAVAN, slouched in his chair beside public defender Frank Cox, showed virtually oo emotion as the verdict was read and the jury polled. Col: bad compared his client to a "pressure cooker" that "blew up." He said that ''if Doctor Gets Fraud Rap LONG BEACH (AP ) -A 4ong Beach doctor has been indicted on charges o f Medicare fraud In connection with a hospital he owned here. Dr. Phil Hansen, 64, and two hospital employes were charg- ed In 21 counts of misrepresenling to the Social Security Administration "the reimbursable costs incurred by the hospital in order to fraudulently obtain ~1e4icare funds," the U.S. Attorney's of- fice said Tuesday. HanS<'n owned the 99-bed Woodruff Community Hospital from 1966 to 1972. The iJl.. dictments follo~·ed a 17-month federal grand j u r y in- vestigation, the U.S. attorney said. ~ I >/" LOS ANG ELES IAP) - Nearly a week after her kid- nap, 11-year-old Tracy Ga yle Greenfield was home again to- day, released from hospital treatment for a drugging, beating and rape. "Don't ever get into a car with someone you d o n ' t know," her father, Henry Greenfield, said in a warning for other children as the girl left UCLA Medical Center Tuesday clutching a big toy stu(fed dog. "Don't hitchhike," the Pt·tission Hills father said. The girl said after she was found abandoned in h1arina Del Rey last Friday that a man had given her $2 to help distribute advertising leaflets. Ptfeanwhile, the c o u n t y Church Says Boy's Death 'Extreme' BARSTOW (UPI) -The death of 11-year-old \Vesley Parker last week , after his parents threw away t h e diabetic youth 's insulin supply, was deplored Tuesday by a spokesman for the Assemblies of God Churches in Southern California. The Rev. William H. Robertson. district superi n· tendcnt of the skt. said while his church "believes in divine healing," it does not "endorse or condone the throwing away of life-saving m e d i ca ti on merely because the individual is presumed healed." Robertson said, "We do not identify with those who take e:rtreme PoSitions of failing to follow a common sense way of life and ~·ould not feel that an extreme position in thi's re- gard brings any particular glory to God, nor does it re- Oect to the credit of tile church." low l'rlon ContlnUI Tllroapoet Ow 1111 Bil Yoor. Coato Colobr1lo Our ffUGE CASINO EXPAllSIOMl PAUi ""INOI, IMI MOW WUTWMID HO MOTIU .. • t > district attorney's office said Robert Lee Ray, 49. would be arraigned in Van Nu y s hlunicipa l Court after charges are filed later today. He has been booked ror investigation or kidnaping in the case. The fathe r said his family "'as anxious to get some privacy and thanked police and the news media for help in the case. be spread Thursday night by California Ecology Corps fire fighters. The ash spreading will take place after l!yrne's fellow His body has already been cremated and his ashes are being stored at the Mission Mortuary in Pt1onterey. O'Ncal said. "The propriety of M r • ~taheu's conduct \\'ill be decfd· ed by a jury or his peers;" Galane said in a telephone \n- terview. ----------------~~~~~~~~~~·~~--~~-~--~~~·~~~~ • I It\· ~/~'/'~-~::~:::-~·~~~~~~~~~~----=~::::~ 1, I · Labor Day Weekend ' ' ' Saturday and Sunday 9 a.m. ·IO p.m., Monday 9 a.m.•7:30 p.m. Featuring eontinuous eountry Western Entertainment by: THE LARRY B00TH BAND rror RAlID AATISrS FOR CAPITOL RECORDS) and THE BRUSH 1\R80R BAND <REQ:NTLY SEEN ON NBC'S ''MUSIC COUNIRY:') e\; rDN F0R THE WII0ts ::::.::. <WlTHNOINCREASEINADMISSiONI PllAflly \ .. .,.,. . .... -~-~ /;. .:·:·:::·.-:. .~ _.;_ ... :··:·:·:.· ·::. --............... . •;--~ ......... . Free old fashioned hayrides ·~day for kids 4·12. ·- Fleet-fooled frolickm ond fancy step pin" (A square dance jamboree) PLUS Eyo-poppm fireworks S..turday'n Sunday nights. SIDE·Sl?l..ITTIN' l\NTieS l\ND el\RRYIN' ElN IN~RBOIBLE LEAl?IN' eRl'liBRS (NEW SHAMU FOR MAYOR SHOW) 001\'ll\ OOPYING 00JBLB Krl'EFLYl\T 800 FSBT (AlRDE\lit. nM RUSING & 1liE SKY FOX) !THE AQUAMANIACS-wmt 1liE NA110N'S HIGHEST HIGH D!VE-84 FEE1) Mesf INeREDIBLE FE1\T EVER PERFElRMBO BY MAN AND l\NL\\lµ- rrnE SHAMU AIDE JUMP) 1\LL F0R 0NE L0W l?RieB 1IT SEA WORLD. MISSleN 81\Y • SAN DIEG0 •' I I I ' 'I . ' ' ' ' D f\O ,y PILOT EDITOJUAL PAGE Burglar Alarm Plan Burglaries of homes and businesses are Newport Beach's biggest crime problem and Police Chief B. James Glavas last week announced a plan to help resolve the problem. Glavas chose a Town Meeting of the Newport Har· bor Chamber of Commerce to unveil a citywide electronic burglar alarm network that could connect every building in the city with police headquarters via a cable televi· sion hookup. He said, in theory, a squad car could be responding to an alarm three seconds after an unsuspecting intruder stepped on a sensitized floor or opened the wrong door. He says, too, it would give instant warning \vhen fire strikes. Glavas says he will take hi s alarm plan -and pro· posed tough controls on home and business locking de· vices -to councilmen within two months. . Glavas made his initial presentation to chamber members, however. ren1embering. and reminding them of adverse public reaction to a television surveillance system he wanted seve ral years ago. One thing that will be crucial to his program is the cost of t.he proposed system. Glavas says it will cost between $250,000 and $350,000 in tax dollars to install the needed computers and other data processing equipment in his new police station. Federal financial help is likely, he said. But he has yet to pinpoint the additional costs that would be borne by those homeowners and businessmen who subscribe to cable television and hook into lhe sys- tem. Besides the normal cablevision hookup and month· 1y rental fees, there would be costs for sensing devices that Glavas said would start at $25. The Police Department reported 656 burglaries in Newport Beach in 1972. The value of goods taken total· led $423,893. emotional and reasoned -for and againsl Glavas' burv glar alarm preposal. Chamber President Richard S. Stevens endorsed It on the spot and said he'd urge the chamber board to back it formally. Others have expressed concerns about potential mis· u.se of the system. All these factors deserve a full airing before city councilmen aeprove the system. At this point, it looks good -certainly worthy of full attention and consider· ation . Real Food Bargain \Vith food prices going up all around, it's nice to know of at least one place where they are remaining basically t.he satne. That place is the Newport-h1esa Unified School Dis- t1ict. A full meal for an elementary school student cost 40 cents last year and it will cost 40 cents again this year. Food Services Director, Eve Cremers, says she will keep prices the same by more careful shopping, prepar· ation of more meals from scratch, and by learning to n1ake such non-meat items as cheese and poultry more attractive to students. Mrs. Cremers says she is dead se t on keeping the price of lunch the sa1ne because she is afraid that some or the district's poorer students may be forced to quit eatinJ? lunch altogether if prices go up. rd - There no doubt will be strong reaction -bolh We can only applaud her intentions and wish her the best of luck in view of the rises in wholesale food prices that are still expected. At a time when food is being restricted , it is more impo11ant than ever that all of our children are given the opportunity for at least one solid, balanced ineal a day. N 'You men behind me keep an eye out for bushwhackers/' Electronic 'Bugs' Could Backfire· To the Editor: Newport Beach Police Chier J~es Glavas ha3 proposed a citywide burglary alarm network via cable television which would link every home and business in this city directly to police headquarters. The chief pointed out that a variety of sensors could be installed by private finns to signal illegal entry, fire, etc. He specifically stated that the police would inspect such installations. J feel it is im· perative to point out to the citizens <>£ Ne~']Xlrt Beach (in these times of Watergate) that there exia!!', t!ie po!en6at for electronic eavesdropptiig ·at any time of the day or night directly by the police department. A LARGE variety of '1 b uggin g devices" could be affixed to such a system surreptitiously and allow direct monitoring at police headquarters of any and all conversations in every single home and business in this entire city. I dO' not suggest that the chief or anyone in our city government is remote· ly conS!dering such application or this c<.ble television alarm network : however. the potentiaJ exists. Times change, police ch.:els Ooine and go, and political \vinds shift. Mass bugging of residences could be implemented at any time by political fiat. JN Al>DmON, I wouJd like to call your attention to the events or southeast Asia in J967 when then Secretary of Defense Robert Strange McNamara announced tht construction or a sophisticated elec- tronic surveillance-interdiction I in e across the 17th parallel. Th e purpose or tl°Js highly sophisticated electronic interdiction system tcode name: Project Mussel Shoals) was to stop or, at least, markedl y impede the flow of men· and material irom North to South Vietnam. Portions of this electronic surveillance system bear similarities to the proposed burglar alann system prcr posed by Chief Glavas. Among the com- ponents of this electronic line \\'ere seismic sensors which tri ggered land mines in response to the vibration of human footsteps. trucks. and ve hicles but were capable of electronically rejecting the seismic vibration of the ubiquitous water buffalo. This system \Vas installed across the 17th parallel L'. an estimated cost of well in excess of two biUion dollars. In short order, the very tmsophisticated North Vietnamese found lhat they could very readily ride water buffalo across the line. I would merely point out that no .matter how sophisticated the sensor system of a burglar alann network Is, professional criminals (even simple rice farmers on occasion) can find ways to avoid it. DONALD R. STEELE, M.D. N~1t's Error To the Editor : The appointment of Henry Kissinger as Secretary of State at this critical time may prove to be one of Nixon's greatest errors. Jt could well result in serious damage fJ> the people ol Israel and to both the Jews and gentiles or the United Slates. MAILBOX Letters from readers are welcon1e. Normally writers should convey the1.r messages in 300 uiords or less. Th e right to condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel Is reserved. All letters must include signature and mailing address, but names may be withheld on reqMst if suffickrit reason is apparent. PoetnJ tcill tiot be published. petent of American diplomats, but more than brilliance is required to solve the Arab-Israel problem. The mediator must be personally acceptable to both. Should Kissinger fail in his attempt at mediation while American cars stand immobile, houses are cold and people cannot reach, their jobs, a strong reaction against both the Adminsitration and Kissinger could occur, making the !alter the victim of an impossible situation. RECOGNIZING its diplomatic ad· vantages we sent Jrish ambassadors to Dublin, Jewish to Jerusalem and Italian to Rome, all with good effect. Are we now reversing this proven policy by ap- poin!ing men of a ntagonistic background? FRANK KLOCK A11lo T!Jr111111!J To the Editor: Sooner or later, the t}Tanny of ''automobile consciousness" must cease. Surely you are aware of the obviously negative effects o: our attaclunent to the motor car. ln the face of this chaos, there really is only one thing to say : No. NO TO MORE METERS, no to more monies made from meters, no to more parking spaces, no to any building (however "tasteful") to house more un- necessary automobiles. Before we can talk about "solutions" to our problms of urbanization, we must say no to the patently obvious pattt!llls of our own self-destruction. JEREMIAH BOWDEN ll11sta1Jl e i'lfan To the Editor: Poor RonaJd Ziegler. Now, he has Lhe hazard of bodily harm added W the other hwnilia ting burdens of serving as devoted slave and court fool to a presi- dent \Vho appears to be c<lnfu~lng himself \\'ilh one of the testier early English kings. ASIDE FROM what happens to Mr. Ziegler and his pride -or Jack of it - f,his country just cannot affo rd to keep such an WlStable man as Richard Nixon in office., and.the sooner we recognize it the belier. Since he will never let go his cro"'11 and sceptre voluntarily, the only answer is to grasp the nettle and im- peach rum. MARGARET NOLEN ~--B11 6eorge ---' Dear George: Dea1· Gloo1nv Gus 'Viii somebody please print a hard· to-get-off but easy-to-apply bumper sticker that says "PARKING SLOB" so I can quickly affix it to cars that clog driveways to laun- dromats, markets and the like where the rest of us citizens use the proper parking slots? I'll b11y a dozen! J.M. Gloomv Gus comme111, .are iubmfltl!d by tuderl .and Ilg not neceswrilv nflK1 ~t w1ew' of tloe MWl'PliPer. Send Yl)l.lr Pt ! PHY• to Gloomv Gu5, Dallv Pllol. Good News For Ailing Globetrotters ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ The happiest ne\VS for world travelers since the invention of Dramamine was reported recently by the World Medical Association, which is distributin g a pocket-size guide to English·speaking doctors in more than 70 countries arowid the \lt'Orld. This International tl.1edical Directory \Viii be more help to Americans thao to anybody else, since we are notoriously lhe \Vorst linguists since the Tasm<1nia11s faded fro1n sight. An Amez·ican abroad can scarcely ask a \Vaiter for a glass of \\'ater, much Jess describe an cibdominal pain or an allergy to penicillin lo a foreign doctor. The problem is made doubly acute by the melancholy fact that fore;gn .;Jctors, in my biased opinion, arc generally in- ferior to lhe American breed . Diagnostically and technically speaking, ":c turn out the most proficient medical men (lf not women) in the world. NOT ON.LY DO our standards setm to be higher, but We are relatively free fro1n the medical paranoia that is rampant in so many other countries. The French, for instance, arc, still obsessed with "liver'": almost any complaint you have that can 't be easily diagnosed is relegated to the liver in France. When I suffered a nasty case of sunstroke at Cannes some years ago, two doctors solemnly assured n1e it was a liver malaise. "No. no," I insisted, "C'est le cou p de solell." They both laughed nastily; everyone knO\\'S that mad d o g s . Englishmen . and 1\n1erican tourists ahvays go out in the mid-day heat and are impervious to sunstroke. It wa s 24 hours before I could get them to !itop treating me for mtilndl~ de folt. Without my rudimentary French, it might have been a week. EVERY COUNTRY seems to have its favorlte ailmen1 . as a sort of grab bag into \l.'hich it.s doctors throw any mysteriou.!i. obscure, or unusual syn- dromes. 111c art of lhe differential diagnosis has been brought to such a high leveJ ln the U.S. U>at we have become stt0lled and lorget how casually hit.or· miss a doctor can diagnose us tn Madagascar or f\forocco . Boats, Plataes Aid S11i11gglers New Drug Traffic Tricks WASHINGTON -The government's \Var against drug smuggling, trumpeted as one of the major domestic successes of the Nixon Administration, is losing the battle to fle ets of small private planes and fast boats. Classified documents from t b e Customs Bureau made available to us demonstrate the ex- tent of the govern- ment's failure. They flatly state that the narcotics agents can- not compete with the ingenuity or the smugglers. 'Ibe dope ruMers , have organized the m o s t important small boat operation since the evacuation of Dunkirk and the government's frag- mented nare-0tics forces are unable to cope with them. "WE MUST undertake a program to provide Customs control of small boat traffic entering the United States." one or the documents asserts. "Smuggling of narcotic drugs by small boats is a serious problem. At present, we have no means of effecting interdiction ol drugs entering the United States by this means.'' The high flying dope peddlers operate \Yith equal freedom , hauling their cargo of white powder from Mexico and Canada \.\'ilh virtually no opposition. "Smuggling by means of private aircraft has gro\.\'Jl in a situation \\'here con! rol of this commerce~ for technical reasons, \1'as not possible," I he documents said. (JACK ANDERSON) In short. the situation is so out of hand that Mafia and free-lance traffickers have virtual carte blanche to haul their \\'ares across the United States borders. FEDERAL antinarcotics officials have n1ade elaborate plans to increase their efficiency in the air and on the water, but budget conscious bureaucrats have cut out this capability. For this fiscal year alone, the Office of Alanagement and Budget has sliced the Customs budget for these plans from $11.4 million to $3.3 million. This penny-wise policy is preventing narcotics agents from acquiring sophis- ticated tools, including aircraft with special tracking equipment, boats fast enough to catch smugglers' craft and sensors to seek out the dope runners. The drug fighters are using some elec- tronic sensors borrowed from the mililll ry, but find them virtually worth· less. "To date, sensors available for boat surveillance have been rudimentary in nature," one Customs report states. "This situation exis\S; because or the lack of developmental funding and technical ca pability that has existed for years within the Customs Agency Service." TUE REA VIL Y publicized seizures of millions of dollars worth of r.arcotics are largely the work of old-fashioned custo ms and narcotics agents at ports or elsewhere. based on leads from painstak· ingly nurtured informants. Arrests of smugglers through random checks of small planes or boats have been few and infrequent. Presently, the air-sea fight against drugs is badly fragmented between Customs at the Treasury Department and the new Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) at the Justice Department. A memorandum describing a mt'eting last month between Customs' air intrusion coordinators and George Brosan, a top Customs enforcement of- ficial. makes clear that neither agency kno~1s what lhe other is dotng. TUERE ARE about 50 planci; of \•arious kinds available at any one time to the two agencies for air and boat surveillance. But ~·ithout cooperation between the.m through use of infonners who signal the epa.rture of a shipment from some :one harbor or airport, the planes are usele . They cannot "picket· line" the entire rd er. DEA. which m wind up with the whole program ev ntually, is too busy reorganizing to tak on any new duties. particularly ones as mplicated as the "Air Intrusion" oper lion. The overall mess · best summed up by Brosan: "Both lhe Drug En ro r cement Administration and he Immigration and Naturalization Se ce have token pro- grams. Neither c compare with the present Customs ffort , and possibly some thought ought to be given to com· bining I.he lhree programs." Safety, But Not Tyranny Every law.abiding citizen has a right to feel safe in bis home, and his person - whether on the street, in the park or in his car. A.lid, he has a right to expect that his government provide !hat safety. But last year there were more than 800,000 relony crimes in California . The crime rate has in- creased nearly 290 percent in the past 10 years. Crim'e is the number one pub- lic concern. Because of that in September. 1 9 7 2. Gov. Reagan named 1 five-member Select Committee on Law Enforcement Problems and charged il to develop recommendations on how best to fight crime. After 10 months or digging into the prob- lem. the task force has Issued its 164- page report. It contains a wide range of significan t and far-reachlng recom-. mcndations: -CREATION of a Public Safety Agen· cy to consolidate slate laW enforcement functions (highway patrol, prisons, emergency services, etc.); -Establish the state poltcy tho! criminals \Vho u.~ firearms during a crime must go to prison, wilhout chance of probation; ( RUS WALTON J and Joc,aJ Emergency Telephone Number in case of crime, fire or accident. POINTING to the need for criminal justice that is swift. certain and strong - bul that it is no\v slow, wicertaln and in- effectual -the Task Force urged reforms to insure speedy trials: -Reclassify minor traffic violations and shift them from the courts to ln- ronnal summary procedures; -Give priority to• cases involving opiates and dangerous drugs ; -Permit six-member Juries for misde- meanors and felonies not punishable by life imprisonment or d'8th and -Authorize verdicts by a five-sixth jury majority, except for capital punish- ment. and -Dispose of cases in favor or the defendant unless the matte r goes to trial within 60 days. · In the area of prison tenns and cor· rectional l1111tltutions, tbe Task Force urged that the state's iJJ-concelved ~ batlon subsidy program be cancelled. Th• committee also urged that WQl'k be made mandatory for all prison inmates except where security requirtmcnts mak~ it Impossible. THE MOST <Olllrovert .. I rte0m· not so much with the rule as with those judges who twist it to coddle the criminal. The solution is not to remove that im · portant citizen potection; the solution is to establish firm parameters within \.\'hich the rule of exclusion can be ap- plied. It is indeed, the first and foremost duty of governmen t to protect us from ~ who would prey upon us. That's what government is all about. But, we must take care Jest the crimea o( the felon are replaced by the tyranny or government. Such a trade is not necessary. And, in the pu,.,utt of justice, It would be or dubious merit. OIANM COAIT DAILY PILOT Robert N. W«d, Pultwher Tlwmal K•<Vil, Editor B•bGra Kj'fibich .Edltol>tat Page Editor • b • , I I I • , • • • ' • ' l • I • ; ·I • '! • l • • ·I ·I ; I I ! t ! " ' I wtm 11lE M~lems confiscating many American oil producers, swimming in oil which they misJ>t easily withhold lrom the desperelt Weatem powers and .., loaded with gold that they are hard· pmsed 10 find ways to spend 11, a m<ldlator IJ needed who II ..cepaable to both sides. Imagine our appointing some Dr. Moltan\med llm Saud as Secretary and 1l<lldJn& him to Jl!nlSai!m 1o ~ with Golda Meir and Gen<ral tloya •.• the 1CrUtn.• Crom both Israel \Vhen you were young did you think you ~ to always make passes nt girls to be "with It" and popular? CJ.ARA Dear ctara: Actually, I never car~· much about b<log populnr. I just did all that because I like girls (llow did you find out, anyhow?) There Is really nothing worse than a medical emergency when you are ln a rorcign country : your xcnophllia qUickly flies out the window. And all your old chauvinistic rcclings come back ihrough lhc door. Surrounded by seven or Europe's most noted speclaltsts, you still wish that Marcus Welby would stride into the room and straighten lhcm all out. -Prison should be lhe general rule, rather than the exception , for convicted narcotics peddlers. Conviction I o r poosesslon or sale of heroin should bring mandatory imprisonment with little hope ol probation: -It should be a misdeme&nor, without exception, for a person to drive a \'Chicle when tlis blood alcohol content is 0.10 percent or higher, aod mendation calls tor the altg)ltlon of the so-called exclusionary rule. That rule holds that evidence obtamcd through IJ· ltpl search and selz\lre It lnadml!lible in court. True, the rule of e1clualon It often used to thwart justice. But, the problem rtsts '111< edttmial ,.... ol 1llo tl<Uy PiiQl .:sttks to Inform 1lnd sdmulate· readers by prts('nth:w on tilis Ne dlvtn:ticommentary' on topics Ol t~ terest by iyndlc&Jtd columni11t •nd cutoontsta, by providlna a forum lot ttadm' views ,art<t by pmtntlnr thlt r'ltWlp&ptr'I oi>ink>nl and idtta en current topics. The tdt10tl&1 opln\ons of lhe Uaily Pilot appear ~ in the editorial column at the 'fOp of the Ne. Oplrtloril e~prt~ by the t!OI· \IMl'lktA and ctl'1_9isfl a(ld ltUft' "1'fttn are tbttr owned no~ -m'"t or -views by th• DAily Pltol -Id "' - Wednesda,y, August 29, 1973 i I 11111 America _,Id reach high heaven. Klalnpr II • p!'Obably the most com· -911 should be lb< olficinl atatewide ( ' I I I 1 I I I I Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 66, NO. 241, 8 SECTIONS, 92 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNES.DAY, AUGUST 29, 1973 c TEN CENTS Grand Jury Probes Progress By JORN ZALLER Of lllo9 Dall' Pllft Sllff The Oran~e County Grand Jury Is con- ducting an investigation to see if Oranke C.Ounty supervisors are moving fast enouah toward bringing Upper Newpert Bay Into public ownership, it was learned today. Marola Bent!, grand jury foreman, said the purpose of the inquiry is "to see lhat the board of supervisors really ac- aimpllshes something" ln Us efforts to acquire the Upper Bay. t• 'Trash Men Get. Holiday Trash and garbage will not be picked up ln the residential areas or Costa Mesa on Monday, Labor Day. AD trash pickups In Costa Mesa next week will be one day later than normally scheduled, according to James Eldridge, manager or the Costa Mesa Sanitary District. Trash will be picked up Monday, Sepl. 10, as scheduled. Girl Scout,s OK in Mexico After Quake A party of eight Orange Coast Girl Scouts and thelr two leaders are aafe and sound today 1n CUernaYaca, Mexico, alter riding out Tuesday's earthquake In Mulco City. Scout officials In Orange CoUnty learn- ed tate rue.day by telephone that two of the glrb aduaDy atept through the Quake. "They are all just fine ," Girl Scout Spokesman Mn. Eva Sacha declared to- day, praising efforts by M>cal Pacific Tel ephone Company persoMel lo make Connections to the ·quake damage zone. "One operator worked on our call for seYeral holU'S," she explained. ; She said o{ficlals talked wltb Mn. F.dward Spurgeon, of Cypress, who ac- companied the girls to Mexico along with Mn. Michael Welt of Newport. Beach. She sald the party, bound for an in- te;national gathering at Our cabana, a Gtrl SCout hospital in Cuema~aca, stayed In Mexico City unW iravel was declared sale. lrbe Girl Scout party tnduding Terri l!Orgman and Sandra Kleeman, Coala Mesa; Mary IA>u Homer, 'J'u,,tin ; Barbara Lindsay, Midway City; Jill Black, Loo Alamitos; Klll<!I Kalar. Garden Grove, and su.un Thomas and (See SCOVTS;Pop Z) Absentee Ballots ()ff ered in l\lesa U you are planning to be out of town Sept. II but stilt want to cast your ballot In the Costa Mesa open space bond elec- tion, here Is wbat to do; Go to the office of the Coata Mesa City Clert before Sept. 4 and mark your iblentee ballot. Ir that Is not possible. <Ill the office, 13~. and request that 1 sample ballot be malled to you.• 1be City Clerk'• omce is located In the ·Costa M ... Civic Center, 77 Fatr Dri ve. Oo the ballot Is a proposal calling !or the e1pendlture or approsimitely 14 mllllon for the acqullltlon and develop- .,..,t o! neorly 70 acres u opeo space. COUCH, CHA.IR " DRAW RESPONSE SUccea stories are not 11 rare as you might think. Look a( this ooe: * !' COUCH & matching chair. Gold Ir white. Almost new. $!0. (Phone No.) This Delly Pilot advertiser hid II calls 11>1 fi"t night! Tbe Item WU IO!d, o! CbUne, and another success story was "'1tt<11. OUr Ad·vllor can belp you write ~ 1ucceaa story. Diii her dlrecl- I Mrs. Bents stressed that the , in- vestigation is part of the grand jufy's •jongoing effort to monitor the operations of all phases of county government "We are not sure at this polnt whether we will issue a report or not," Mrs. Bents said. "If the effort to acquire the bay Is mov- ing too slowly wt will have something to say,".she declared. "If good progresS is being made, we ma)' keep quiet.'' she said, "but we do Five Injured h1 Jolting LA Airliner LOS ANGELES (AP) -Five women were injured, one critically with a broken neclt, when a Trans World Airlines Boeing 7ffl was jolted as jt approached Los An1etes International Airport. 'Tw A sad the mtsbap Tuesday night was caused by mechanical failure or air turbulence. An investiga tion ls under way. A passenger, Ann Clemente of San Diego, said "For a minute, It !ell like we were at the Promised Land. "There were people behind me praying. We were flying through the air. We were bounced around quite a bit." The women, including two stewardesses, were standing up when the plane shook, TWA said. Marge Payette of HID!lington Beach, was in critical condition with a broken neck at Centioela Valley CommMity Hospital. Two others were hospitalized with Iesaer injuries. They were idenWied as Ellen Hargitay, 31, of Los Angeles, with a sprained hand and a possible back in· jury, and Te-sun Hse, 16, of Taiwan, with a broken jaw and a possible fractured skull. The stewardesses were treated at the hospital and released. They were iden- tified as Ellen Chapiro, 21, of Honolulu, and Betty Gray, 30, of Steamboat Springs, Colo. Hospital spokesman said both suffered lower back injuries. United Press International quoted one passen_ger saying there was a lot of "Praying out loud." "People were touching the celling and coming down t'' said John Adams of Norton, Mass. "It was really chaos." "A couple of people !ell very badly. The people who were not in their seats, they were the ones who got hurt." Adams said there was no warning to fasten seat belts. He added there was "no panic." The spokesman said a military doctor traveling on flight 7;42 from Hong Kong via Okinawa, . Taiwan, Guam and Honolulu aided the injured before the jetliner landed. There were 132 passengers and nine crew members aboard the flight, scheduled to terminate in San Francisco. Passengers were sent to San Francisco aboard other planes. want to make sure that the county keeps up the effort to bring the bay Into public ownership." The Irvine C.Ompany last April offered ib , Upper Bay holdings to whatever public agencies are interested in them, saying terms of a land sale or trade could be worked out later. The company said it was willing to ac· cept any reasonable terms of purchase and stressed that it hoped the public could assume possession of the Upper Bay as soon as possible. A joint federal, state, county and city agency -the Upper Bay Field Com- mittee -has been meeting regularly in an effort to work out an agreement With the company. There bas been little tangible progress during those five months, however. The offer had been made under the thl"eat ot'a prescriptive tights lawsuit by the county. Mrs. Bents acknowledged that there have been complaints that certain Thn1nhed Down Officer Bails Out Prospector A strapping, bearded goJd prospector rrom Hope, Alaska, thumbed a ride south out of Newport Beach for San Diego Tuesday to see a sister facing a leg amputation, alter a short stopover in jail. HE lllT the road with :)4 cents in ready money and two mining claims in his pocket after a sympathetic policeman loaned him $2 to make up the dlfier- enc.e in an $8 fine . Patrick W. Jones, 24, standing six feet, three inches tall and weighing 117 pounds, was formally arrested and booked on a charge of hitchhiking in the roadway. Patrolman Bob Hardy claimed Jones was standing In traffic lanes in the :oo> block of West Coast Higlrway, holding up a sign saying: San Diego. THE OFFICER ,claimed ,.veral cars· had to sworve oroond the· miller. Olf1Cer Hardy sild Jones, who bad only $6.54 In cash, carried DC! formal identification and had no otJvious local ties, such as relatives in the area, so he was taken to beadqu,arters. Autboritiel were concerned about Jones' failure to cam a driver's license, draft card 'Ii other acceptsble identilication. "BE liAn two l20 traveler's check!, a bunch o! papers and a couple of mining claims with the name Patrick W. Jones/' said anOtber j>atrolman who asked not to be identified. .. I've been to Alaska," he continued. "And the people there have a par- ticular type of personality. He seemed to be a good guy. "Don't print this," said the sympathetic officer, ''but I loaned him a couple of bucks to make ball" • Newport Airport Criticism Disputed by Bresnahan By L. PETER KRIEG Of Ille Deity l'tlol Staff Orange Collllty Supervisors did conduct a public hearing on proposals to make improYements to the terminal at Orange County Airport. airport director Robert Bresnahan said today. . Newport Beach councilmen Monday night criticized the supervisors for ap- proving the c.hanges and "demanded" DELINQUENT TAX LIST PUBLISHED The deadline for property t a x payments bas come . and gone and hun- dreds of Orange Coast property owners Jiave yet to pay the piper. Orange County Tax Collector Robert Citron's list ot delinquent taxpayers. ap- pears on Pages 28 and 'l1 of today!s Daily Pilot. they conduct a hearing before obtaining building permits. . Newport Beach missed Its opportunity to speak out against the improvements, however, Bresnahan said, when the city failed to voice its opposition at a June 22 hearing on the airport budget. "The items were in the budget and there was no opposition at the bearing," Bresnahan pointed out. He said approval of the budget came Aug. 21 "at a public meeting" where no opposition was expressed. Bresnahan a1so said the county doesn't even consider the changes to be "airport ecpansioo." "We are enclosing an area that has been used alt along since last February," he said. "It's a holding area for passengers who have been searched -we cal! it 'sterilized!.-and when it rains, we can't ha Ye these people standing outdoors," be said. He aald the airport Is leaving ltsell (S.. AIRPORT, l'lge Z) Surplus Land Up for Sale First Bids for Defurict Freeway Acreage Due Nov .. 6 The State of California will sell 2t parcels of land purchased for the now· defunct Pacific Coast Freeway In Newport Beach within the next few months, It wu disclosed Tuesday. The property, mostly slngle-lamlly homes along Kings Road, wa.s purchased between 1915 end 197t !or about $6.4 million. State offlclels estimated th9t disposing of it through soaled bids would probably bring aboug $10 million to the treasury ol the state Department of Trensportetlon, wt.lcll now owns the property. The first aele of two parcels will take place Nov. 8 at Newpert Beach City Holl. The disclosures were made Tuesday in Santa Ana at a meeting o! the C.llfomle COmn\Lsslon on Government Operation and Ec<!llolll)'. · 1be Little Hoover Q>mmlsslon, es the stat~ commission Is more commonly known, 113$ held four meetings In the past three years to press the California Highway r.>mmlsslon to dispose of surplus freeway. land as 900n as pos.g.ble. "We held the meeting to demonstrate to the Little Hoover t:munissioo that we are selling off our surplus land as last as we reasonably can," said Murray Stonn, assistant road commlsstoner of Orange County. "If the Little: Hoover Commlss:lon..were not conv'inccd cl-our aood Intention, tt might pressure us lnfu telling oU too much land too soon," Storm edded. Newport Beach · Mayor Donald A. MclMis told memben of the commission that the city was working with tbe county to Identify which of 3t lddltlonat parceb or rr.eway land ml&bt also be surplus. ''We are comlng near to making some decisions about how much of the re- maining land will be needed for traNPQrtation," Mcinnis said. "But before we sell the land, we want to be very sure that It Is really surplus." Nathan ShapeU, a commtsaion member, expressed criticism of the Highway Commission for buying so much freeway land In the first place. "Newport Beach ls an example or what is going on all over the state," Shapcll complained . He said that since t985, the state has ncqulred $12.4 million worth ol property that may now be worth up to $20 mllllon. Annual taxes on that, he said, would amount to $180,000 if it were on the tax rolls. But since It was publicly owned, he said, that revenue was lost. He said that throughout the state there (See SURPLUS, Page Z) on Upper Bay supe.nrisors have employed delaying tac· tics and said the "Grand Jury's en· vironmental committee is folloWing them up . She said information has been re- quested from a number of sources in an effort to evaluate the efforb of the board of supervisors. Filth Dislrict Supervisor Ro n a l d Caspers of Newport Beach, chairman of the county board, is one of those the Grand Jury asked to comment on the progress of negotiations. Nixon Gets Five Days For Appeal WASIUNGTON (AP) -The Watergate trial judge this anernoon ordered Presi- dent Nixon to tum over for the judge's private inspecUon tapes subpoenaed by the Watergate prosecutor, but stayed the order for five days to permit appeal. U.S. District Court J~dge John J. Slrlca said In a ruling certain to be ae- pealed that Nixon must ''prOduee forthWith for the cow:t's examination in c&mera" the tape reeordlgs of N,ixon1s conversations With' key alil!s implieat¢ In ~ Watergate inyestlptton. Sirica: said be would not twn over to a grlJ!ld jury material In the ta""8 lie found to be prtvUeged, but said he "°'11dn't decide what was privlleged without ge~ ting the tapes. He· ordered the fiY&<lay delay and add- ed that he would extend the stay lndefi· nately il the completion ol appeals re- quired it. . Sirica's order was the first time in history that a judge has commanded a President to produce materials over bis objections:. Nixon bas claimed that to , disclose the documents and tapes would violate the confidentiality of t h e presidency. Sirica called his course a middle ground between the two conflicting claims of the President and of the Watergate prosecutors, who want to ex- amine the tapes in tbeir investigation of the Watergate aUair. . .. He said that without discrediting the strength of the Watergate grand jury's claim to the information he could not "as matters now stand, rule that the present claim of privilege is invalid." • Instead, Sirica said in a 231Jage opinion which accompanied his order for _the tapes, "the court has attempted to walk the middle groWld between a f.ailure to decide the question of privilege at ooe extreme, and a whole!ale delivery of tapes to the grand jury at the other." Sirica put his dilemma plainly: "The (S.. TAPES, l'lge Z) * * * Aide: President W 00:'t Comply With Decision BULLE'11N President Nixon· wlb refue to comply wttb a federal Judge's order to tam over tapes of White Rone cMtvtnatlons for the jud~e's priYate btlpection, the West- ern White Roa.se llld W. afternoon at San Clemente. The Western White House today had no immediate comment on the ruling by U.S. District Judge John Sirica that President Nixon must relinquish all the secret tapes he bao made In the White House . Ftrst word of the federal court ruling on the tapes came as Deputy Press Secretary Gerald Warren was In the midst of a routlno pn!ss briefing. Reporters interrupted Warren to giYe h1m the news of th• ruling, considered a major blOw to President N I x o n ' s ph\losopey ol Conlldentialltf. In the White HOWIC. "This !Its a poltcy that I have set for brfefinp where l cannot comment on a matter wllb which we are not famili ar,·· said Warren. Despite repeated attempts by r!1JOr1Crs to wrest a comment, Warren remained firm and would onJ1 commit himself to an advisory late ' this afternocn as to whethe< the White Houae would have anr comm<nt at all. Essentially, ht promised only 1 statement on wbetber the White House will comment at all. Caspers said he is preparing a \\'ritten commentary containing his views, but would not comment directl y on the re- quest. However, he did express "concern" over what he called "footdragging" by tht: board .. s a whole. "AJI the public agencies on the Field Committee are eager to get going," Caspers said. "It is only the County of Orange that doesn't seem to be in a hur- ry." UPIT ........ WANTS NIXON TAPES Fadoral Judge Sirlca Burglar in l\lesa Runs for Life; 'Victim' Shoots Costa Mesa police say a burglar who entered the apartmt;nt of an insurance agent early today came close to getting hurt when. the agent picked up his own insurance against troublemaking in· truders -a pistol -and fired. The shot in the dark missed its mark and the bullet Janded in a nearby flower bed a(ter ricocheting off the . asphalt outside, ·according to investigators w1-> turned up the slug. Eugene 1£one, 47, of 196l Maple St., told police he chased the dark-dad burglar outside with his .380 Beretta aut~ matic after first struggling with him in the bedroom. During the 12 :15 a.m. figbt , Leone received a one-inch gash on his ear, possibly from a knife carried by the Afro-haired burglar, police theorize. Leooe said be was asleep when be was awakened by the intruder and leaped out of ~' tackling him on the way out the door. The man got away in the struggle so Leone grabbed bis gun !rom the night· stand and went after him. Coast Weather The sun wiU peek through those low clouds Thursday morning leav- ing the rest of tbe day falrly sunny. Highs will range from 7tl at the beaches to 7li inland. Overnight lows 63-65. INSUit; TOlti\ V It was o goy tlms in NttD York -tt>en though &hey loit miser- ably. The ho11iosc%Ual commu. ttity played &ht police depart. me11t in 11 /rietldly ba1tboll game to better their image. Story ?oge 1. Al Yovr ftnt<• I L..M. 11,11 11 INHM • C•ll*-1• 1.11 c.,.... tefft"' ,, CllNllltll u..t CMllU " CrtM_.. • DNll1 Notkts 14 ............ ' ..... ,~ Moll ff...._ 11·U .... "" ll:ei:wt u ......... J2 I , • ' 2 DAJL Y PILOT c Wtdntsday, AIJgUS\ iq, 1973 Mexico Disaster· 500 Die, More Feared in Quake J\IEXI CO CITY (UPI J -T~~ death toll 1n 1'uesday's earthquake moWlted steadi· ly today, and by dav:n the Mexican presidency \l'as reparting "about 500 dead ." One l\1exico City newspaper put the toll at 924. The Mexico City daily El ~lcraldo said 600 died. Other counts ran bet11•een 400 '}Ind 600. · AL least 2.000 persons 1vcre reported in· jured and tens of thousands left homeless. As dawn broke, survivors dug through the ruins of their homes. The dead "'ere laid out in private homes, local hospitals and blankets under the streets. some were still under the debris. The death toll rose as reports came in from outlying villages and crews con· ·Jinued to clear the wreckage. : Rain ripped the area Tuesday night but j:leared by dawn. Residents took little police of it. . In the quake-stricken area surrounding the 18.700-foot Orizaba volcano, debris stood still scattered on the streets of several large towns and a multitude of villages. Ambulances ran from the Orizaba Valley, Ciudad Serdan and other heavily·· hit areas lo hospitals in nearby state capitals. Traffic in the area v.·as packed v.·ith volunteer cars carrying the Red Cross banner. From PfJfle l TAPES ... court is simply unable to decide the ques- tion of privilege \vithout inspecting the tapes." Sirica said that if privileged and un· privileged material are intermingled, only unprivileged material may be taken out and transmitted to the grand jury. On the other hand, he continued, "if privileged and unprivileged eVidence are so inextricably connected that separa· tion becomes impossible, the whole must be privileged and no disclosure made to the grand jury." If it is apparent that the tapes are ir- relevant to the investigation, "or that for state reasons they cannot be intro- duced into the case, Ute subpoena . , . would be useless,•• he said. "But if this is not apparent, if they may be important to the investigation, if they may be safely beard by the grand jury, ii only In part, would it not be a blot on the page which records the judicial proceedings of this country, if in a case of such serious imJ)Ort as this, the court did not at least call for -an inspection of the evidence in chamber'?" Sirica asked in concluding his opinioo. Hours before Sirica's ruling, White House and Senate lawyers filed papers in the parallel suit brought by the Senate Watergate committee, which also seeks the tapes. \Vhite House attorneys argued that a federal court has no jurisdiction to de- cide whether Nixon must turn the tapes over to the Senate panel. N ixort Takes Fre ew ay Trip President Nixon went for another drive on the California freeways, accompanied by his wife, Pat, and daughter, Tricia Nixon Cox. Escorted by two Secret Service cars, the Nixons stopped Tuesday for an hour at Red Beach inside the t Ca.mp Pendleton Marine base. The \Vestem White House did not announce the President ·s excursion until the Nixons had arrived at the beach. A news media car that attempted to follow them found its path blocked by the Secret Service. ,;There are certain times ~·hen the President \\·ants to be private." ieputy press secretary Gerald L. Warren told reporters. OIAN•I COAST CM DAILY PILOT T'lle Or .... ~U OAR.Y !"IL.OT, will\ ""'kh Ille ~ tl'le ........ Prft1, is publllhld _., .. a...t c..u ...... isllirlll c.,.......,, ..... nflf _.. 1rt OllbflJ'*', Moria, lflrouoll FrliNr. ,.,. co.c. ~. H•WJIOrt lffch, Hurlflllef"n h «ll/F"-Mlft VII...,, UsillN a.o,. 11"¥iilil/....,,,1.-.ct " i..11 C...._ni.t S... J..,,. Gtltltll'"..... 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At the town hall in Orizaba officials \\'ere coordinating reports from outlying viUages. Those who lost their homes stood in line outside the building waiting to report the losses. Waverly Person ol the National Earth· quake In!onnation Center in Boulder, Colo., said the quake appeared to be the \.\'Orst in ~·lexico 's modern history in terms or loss of life. The early morning quake, centered in fault lines deep under ~fexico's moun- tainous central spine, registered 7 on the Richter Sca le -more powerful than the December quake in Managua, Nicaragua that killed 5,000 persons. The Managua quake had a Richter intensity of 6.2. Hardest hit in Tuesday's quake was tbe town of Orizaba, caught in the epicenter of the giant temblor. A three-story apartment building in the com muni ty of 50,(l(X) persons 150 miles east-southeast of Mexico City collapsed, killing more than 100 tenan ts asleep in- side. - ~1exican President Luis Echeverria 11'as en route today to the devastated zone around Orizaba. Thousand were left without homes. Red Cross officials said about 800 p;ersons were injured. They estimated 100 persons died in Quecholac in Puebla State; 80 in Ciudad Cerdan, 178 in Orizaba, two in Puebla and two in Cordoba in Veracruz State. Others died in scattered areas. Officials said Puebla, Mexico's fourth largest city with a. population of 550,000 located 80 miles southeast of Mexico Ci- ty, also suffered extensive damage. UPI reported Timothy Berry reported from Orizaba that the Swiss-slyle city was half destroyed as score~ of buildings toppled, burying occupants in rubble. Hundreds were left homeless. Mayor Humberto Guitierrez said the ·city's 350. bed hospital ¥las badly damaged. Schools were deffi91ishecl. From Pagel AIRPORT ... ppen to lawsuits by persons secured in these areas who are also subjected to "jet bla!ts and a high level of noise" trom planes taking of( nearby. "Besides, we're operating haJf.iJ. legally," he said, "the holding area is right below the balcony outside the upstairs restaurant and somebody could drop a gun to Cl passenger down below. "Once passengers have been sterilized, they shoul4 not have any opportunity !or contact with non-passengers," he said. Bresnahan also pointed out that the search of passengers was mandated by federal law and he said that mandate has also forced him to find new office space so offices for security personnel can be enlarged. "Right now we've got IO men crowded in to a five-foot by nine-foot office," he said. The airport chief said he has received formal complaints from the employes' association because of it. Bresnahan said it would be impossible to do as other airports do, screen all non· pa~engers who enter holding areas. "We don't have that kind of room," he said. Bresnahan refused to comment on a personal attack hurled at him Monday by Newport Beach Vice Mayor Howard Rogers . Rogers had charged that Bresnahan wants his office moved because it is in public view and he said Bresnahan has "a vanity problem." Bresnahan ptans to relocate his offices to the ~fission Beechcraft buiding just north of the airport terminal on 1\-facArthur Boulevard. "l don't think they need to make more room for passengers just so he can move his office closer to the Airporter Inn so it can be handier for lunch and cocktails," Rogers said. F ront P"fle l SU RPLUS ... is an estimated S200 million worth Qf surplus freeway land off the tax rolls and not subjoct to taxation. Wes FuJler, chaiirnan of the Highway Commission, replied that the land was bought in expectation that a freeway wouJd be built. "\Ve did not foresee that the freeway \vould be killed." he said. ''If it had not been. to buy the land now could cost twice as much." In addition , he noted, the state prob· ably would be able to sell the land at a profit. - TONIGHT "CATCH 22" -South Coast Repertory Thcate.r, through Sun. 8 p.m. 'l'HURSDAY, AUG. 30 LIBRARY STORY HOUR -Costa M.,• Mein Ubrary, 10:30 1.m. SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB -Com· munily Recreation Center, J2-3 p.m. • Homes Destroyed Survivors of Earthquake Numbed by Ruii1s, Dead ORIZABA, Mexico !UPI) -A gray· haired woman dug through a waist-high rock pile that used to be her home. A middle-aged man watched silently while wreckers tore at huge concrete slabs that cover a whole city block. It was an apartment house before the quake. The man, Miguel Angel Cisneros, used to live there. His sister died ther:e. Orizaba: is in a daze, like the woman digging through the rocks, still not show~ ing emotion. The town, nestled in a green alpine va lley in the Mexican Slerra Madre mountains , was hit Tuesday by the worst of a violent earthquake that rocked most of central Mexico. There was no electric power. No drink· ing water. ·Traffic ran in detours around the streets, filled with fallen bricks, adobe, wood, cement and glass. • Nixons to Leave Oemente Home Friday Evening People gathered in darkened cafes and on street comrs. "Where were you when it hit'?" they asked each other. ~lany stood to watch the crews clear the wreckage. Cranes and bulldozers helped with the big pieces. One group tied a cable to a damaged building. They pulled until the wall tumbled down in a cloud of dust. Octasionally, a Red Crass ambulance sped off, whining, carrying another body taken from underneath the wreckage. The Packard Building, a three-story apartment complex, was once a landmark here on the city's main avenue. Half of it coilapsed. Its 100 sleeping oc· cupants were all feared dead. Cisneros shared a first floor apartment with his sister. He Spent Tues<la y night with his mother, in her house, and lived. His sister died beneath the ooncrete. "That's my stuff they're taking out no,\'," he said, pointing to a squashed mattress. "That's where they found my s.ister." He stared at the wreckage with dry, unblinking eyes. An ambulance was called as wreckers pulled out a body. "That's the la~')'er, I fogct his name. But he was one of my ne ighbors." From P"fle 1 SCOUTS ... President and Mrs. Nixon will leave the south Orange Coast late Friday for a flight to \Vashington D.C. and a Labor Judy Leonard , Cypress; left Aug. 23 and Day weekend at Camp David. is due back a week from today. Confirmation or the pr e m a t u r e They are high school-age Girl Scouts departure by the chief executive came at selected from among applicants seeking today's news briefing, but White House to represent Orange C.Ounty at this year's [ Ex-city Official Jolm Cl1arleville Succumbs in Mesa Funeral services are set Thursday for •Costa ~fesan John W. Charleville. onetime city manager of three Southland communities, \\'ho died suddenly Sunday at the \\·heel of his car after pulling up at the home he shared wi th a daughter. Rites for Mr. Charleville. 83, will be at 10:30 a.m. at Forest Lawn,· Cypress, with interment to follow there. He was stricken shortly after arriving at 354 Broadway from a shopping trip to buy items for a Sunday famil y get· together. Mr. Charleville had lived there with his daughter, Mrs. Billye Lavrakas, for 21,~ years and previously made his home in Newport Beach. He was a Conner city manager of Pasadena, Glendale and Loog Beach, \\'here in the early 1940s he was in· strumental in es tablishing what is now Long Beach International Airport. He served in the 1930s as Deputy Director of the State Department of Natural Resources. He left the Long Beach city po.st in 19'41 to bcrome assistant to the president of Western Air Lines and at the time of his retirement in 1969 Mr, Charlevllle was trust officer of Harvey Mudd College in Claremont. His interest in higher education also in· eluded helping establish the University of Southern California SChool of Public Administration. During his tenure as Pasadena City Manager and also afterward, Mr. CharleviJle was active \\'it h the Pasadena .Tournament of Roses Association which stages the aMual New Year's celebra- tion. Survivors in addition to Mrs. Lavrakas include two other daughters. Mr s. Jesmin Sperry, of Newport Beach, and Mrs. Aldola Collins. of Arcadia, a brother, Deiiver Cbarleville, of Long Beach, 12 grandchildren and one great grandchild. He came to California in 1921 with his family. moving from Texas to Oklahoma and on westward. Heat Wave Still Grip s East Coa st Dy The Associated Press ' Stilllng beat gripped mw:h of the East; Coast and Midwest today, bringing on: another five percent voltage cut in New' York state, scattered curtailments of; auto prbduction and air· poUuUon prob--; !ems in the Washingtcr1'.;BaJtimore area.· Even in the relatively cool Pacific· Northwest, °a severe drought lowered hydroelectric production, and Oregon Gov. Tom McCall called for a voluntary IO percent cut in power use. In response, Portland television station KGW-TV moved daytime news oper&- tioos outdoors. The station estimated it saved 135 kilowatt hours daily by using natural light. 'Che power crisis was most serious iri. New York state, where temperatures soaring into the 90s made for a massive use of air conditioners. For a second day in a row , a 5 percent voltage cut was in effect as demand re- mained at record peaks. The State Power Pool met a demand Tuesday for 20,132,000 kilowatts, hi ghest in history; and said it expected demand to go still higher. General Motors reported that opera- tions at its Linden, N.J. plant were. curtailed as so me of the 1,750 worker1 left jobs because of the heat . Some employes at Chrysler's Warren» Mich. truck plant stopped work. forcing a shutdo1vn of the facility which employs 2.000 on the day shift. Ford and American Motors reported normal operations. The Washington area s we 1 t e re d through another day of near·record temperatures, smog and power failures. The temperature hit rn Tuesday and was hovering at tha t level today. The nation's capital had an air pollution alert for the fifth straight day, and the 17th of the year. + The Potomac Electric Power Co. had to replace six transformers. 31 transformer fuses and J 1 line fuses. Mesan to Face Fo1rrtl1 Child Molesting Ra p Police have added a fourth chUd molesting charge Jo the growing booking record of Joseph Reitano, a 60-year-old Costa Mesan currently being held in Ueu of $50,000 bail. ' Costa Mesa poli ce allege that Reitano; \I-ho lists hls occupation as watch repairman, participated in sexual rela- tions with an 8-year"ld boy. The boy is the brother of a 10.year"ld gi rl Reitano allegedly molested in a Costa Mesa motel, police said. Detective George Wilson said this brings to I7 the individual counts of child molestation with which Reitano will be fonnally charged in Harbor Jud.lei~ District Court. Reitano will also be accused ot. molesting two other Costa Mesa girls\ both It. Known for his past battles with Jaw en'. forcement agencies over a 11 e g e d I Y pornographic books and movies, Reitano; 1845 Anaheim Ave., was arrested on the first molestation charge Aug. 21. . After arraignment on the fJrst charge, Reitano was rt!leased on his own recognizance. spokesmen said they were not exactly international gathering at Cuernavaca. certain as to the First Famlly 's I ~-oomi~j~~-m;;;;;;;;~~;;:;;::;:;;::;;;;;;;r-iiillOiiii!iiiiiii'j departure time from La Casa Pacifica. I: Initially, the President had planned to .. spend at least three weeks on the Orange , ~ Coast and to remain at his villa through the Labor Day Weekend, which has been a customary pattern. liowever, the visit will only last about two weeks. Spokesmen said the President \1'ould rather spend the holiday at his retreat in the mountains of ~laryland so that most of his family can be with him. One daughter, Julie Nixon Eisenhower, is al ready in the nation's capital. The President's other daughter, Patricia Cox , is in San Qemente. Welfare Leader Guilty of Fraud EL CENTRO (APl -The president of the Welfare Rights Organization here has been con vicled of welfare fraud. Mary McGra \v, 26. \vas convicted Mon· / day of a misdemeanor charge In Imperial Justice Court. She was sen- tenced to 30 days in jail, but lt was suspended on the condition she pay $315 fine and agree to two .years probation, court officials said. Miss McGraw was accused of being employed during December and January, but had signed a form saying she was unemployed at the time. Complaints Revealed WASHINGTON (AP) -Numerous coDiplaints about radio and flight In· strnments were recorded in the night lop of the Delta Air Lines Jet that cr .. h. ed at Boston July 31, the Notional n-ansportation Safety Board said today. ~ Eighty-eight of the 19 per80ns aboard th• night were killed when the 009 jet crashed into a seawall short or the runway at Logan lnter11ation1i Airport. I I Sox-Wickdry-Cotton Tube-Tennis Shoes-Basketball-Tennis Football-All Purpose Gym Pants-Reversible Y.Shirts Warmup Suits sweat Suits Tennis Rackets Handbaff Gloves Racquetball Racquets Speedo SWim Suits ' Open 9 to 6 Closed Sundays • • Basketballs Volley Balls & Nets Footballs Playground Balls Duckfeet . Fins Water Wonder Boards Skate Boards Back Packs Sleeping Bags Book Bags Raleigh Bikes Repairi112-Tires..-Tubes ,. CLOllD SUNDAY r ) ' ; ., • I I ! Innocent r;-Bedayan Through lnsa11ity ~---.~ .. ~ ............ ., •• -!"""'" Wtdntsday, .AL19ust 2CJ, 1973 DAILY PILOT $ 'Owe1 $4.4 Million' ~ Hughes Files Counte1~suit Against Ex~hief Mahe~ SAN RAFAEL (AP) -A· jury has found 22-year<>ld Bn!nt Bedayan Innocent by rtason ol insanity of shotgun. nlng a MUI Valley family to death last October. "It was clear t]!at &dayan did have a psychotic delusion about 'Oa.My and there was some quesUon about his father as the enforcer," said jury forenwi Du.le A. Stopp after innouncing the verdict Tues· day. "BUT WE couldn't rind any clearcut reason why he killed Ruth. That's when we found hlm insane," Stopp said. Bedayan had been accused of killlog Melvin Schallock, 61, ,his wife Ruth, 56, and his son, Daniel, 20, last March 18 and then burning their home. The seven-woman, live-man Jury deliberated a little over four hours Tuesday before finding ll<dayan legally insane. The~me jury had convicted Bed an on three counts of vol tary manslaughter Mon- day evening in the ';guilt" Ji>ase ol the trial. WHEN MARIN County Dist. Atty. Bruce Bales asked Tues- day that the jury be polled, each member affirmed the in- nocent verdict by reasons of insanity on all thn!e counts. Marin County Sup e'r i o r Coort Judge Henry J . Broderick inunediately turned Bedayan over to the state Department of M e n t a I Hygiene lor transfer to a callfomia mental facility. He called the verdict ''a sound result in the case." Before they he!!"'"' rJelibera- tions, Bales had 1c-· :1e jurors that '"at the criticul moment, Brent Bedayan could have stopped. But he consciously ch:>se not to." BEDAYAN, slouched in his chair beside public defender Frank O>x, showed virtlially no emotion as the verdict was . . rud and tbe jury polled. ~ Cm: i.d compared: bis client . ' " •, t'. •; .. ~ .. ' r I. I to a "pressure cooker" that 11bJew up." He said that "if Doctor Gets Fraud Rap LONG BEACH fAP) -A Long Beach doctor has been indicted on charges o f Medicare fraud in conne<tion with 1 hospital he owned here. Dr. Phil Hansen, 64, and two hospital employes were charg- ed in 21 counts o f mi~ting to the Social Security Administration 11the reimbursable costs incurred by the hospital in order to fraudulenUy obtajn Medicare funds," the U.S. Attorney 's of- fice aald Tuesday, Hansen ~ed the 99-bed Woodruff <ll!nmunlty Hospital from 1966 to 1972. The iJ1.. dlctments followed a 17-month federal grand j u r y in- \'estigation, the U.S. attorney said . .pUs was not an insane act by a young boy who had nothing to gain, then thert art no legally Insane people in the state ol Calilornia. · "I want to lhank you for Mr. and Mrs. Bedayan'' Cox said. 0 1 don't think Brent can thank you Mw." "THE COURT'S instructions to the jury directed tbem to return a verdict of voluntary manslaughter." Bales said. "Tbc results would have been diffen!nt if the judge bad given them my •feJony.murder instructions, which would have made the theory of diminisbed capacity irrelevant." In the 20 days ol trial testimony, Bedayan was label- ed a paranoid·schizophrenic by five psychiatrists. They said he had delusioos of pain Im· pulses sent telephatically from Daniel Schallock and saw the elder Scha.Uock as a gangland- type "enforcer." Biking for Funds Eighteen bicycle riders from Sacramento, between 15 and 22 years·old, are bik· ing across the country. The group, pedaling past the Capitol Tuesday, hopes to . . forestall curtailment of Red Cross services in Sacramento. l(idnliped 11-year-old Home Agai,n LOS ANGELES (AP) -At· tomeya for Howard Hughes ' contend that Robert A. Maheu, the depoaed cbiel of Hughes' Newtda empire, owes the recluse billionaire more than $4.4 million. Hughes' Su mma Corp. at· tomeys llsted the sum when they gave notice In federal court Tuesday that they would file a OOWl1er-complaint Sept. 17 against Maheu, who is seek- ing $13. 7 mJllion damages in a libel suit against Hughes Tool Co. l\tAllEU FILED his suit In federal court two months after the January 1971 telephonic Dead Fire Fighter's Ashes To Be Spread neW! conference by a min who sald he WU Hughes. Maheu said he was llheled when the man erplained th& reasons for Maheu'-' discharge . J\1aheu's suit is scheduled to come to trial before U.S. District Court Judge HarrY Pregerson Oct. Z3. ~ Pregerson requested the a~~ counting of funds which at- torneys lor Hughes' Sumll)& Corp. contend are owed to Hughes by Maheu. .J 1, SUMMA CORP. is the SACRAP..1ENTO (AP \ -The corpsmen conduct en evening "·ho lly owned Hughes firm ashes of a 21-year~ld San memorial service in his honor which holds title to HugMs'. Diegoan who died Cighting a Las Vegas OOldings. I in the Big Sur State Park, The f 1· M heu lire in the mountainolLS Big court i 1ng says a Sur area will be scattered in O'Neal said. owes Hu g h es $4,458,474.38. that same region hy his fellow He reported Hyme's n1other That sum includes $2,120.000 fire fighters, a s t a t e requested the action. paid Maheu when he was spokesman said. Hyme worked for the corps ~lughes' top el<ecutive jn Jack O'Neal, spokesman for for 14 mon ths and \\'SS based Nevada from 1967 to 1970. the state Department of at lhe state agency's Los Osos f\1aheu's attorney. Morton Conservation. said Tuesdav Center near San Luis Obispo Ga.lane, S.'lid in Las Vegas thet the ashes of Danny Hyme will before his death Sunday. ~laheu would not comment. be spread Thursda y night by His body has already been "The propriety of i\1 r. LOS ANGELES (AP) -district attorney 's office said are filed later today. He has was antious to get some California Ecology Corps fire cremated and his ashes are l\faheu's conduct will be decid- Nearly a week after her kid-Robert Lee Ray, 49, would be been booked for investigation privacy and thanked police fighters. being stored at the Mission ed by a jury or his peers,:• nap, ll·year~ld Tracy Gayle arraigned in Van Nu y s of kidnaping in the case. and the news media ror help in The ash spreading will take Mortuary in Monterey, O'Neal Galane said in a telephone in-- Greenfield was home again to-. _M_u_n_ic...:IJ>S:s_I Co~u...:rt...:ar:.t:.":....::'ha:::..'.rg'..:es:___...:T...:he:....::fa::the::::.r ...:"...:i...:d...:hi:..':....::'•...:m...:il~y-1_he...:c...:a...:se...:. _______ ~Pi...:ace:.:...:...:•...:ft...:er...:.._H...:ym=e...:'s...:.._r.:.el_lo_w_sa_id_. _________ terv_i_ew. day. released from h>spitat1 · ------- treatment for a drugging, beating and rape. "Don't ever get into a ca r with 90llleODe you d 0 D ' t koow," her father, Henry Greenfield, said in a warning for other children as the girl left UCLA Medical Center Tuesday clutching a big toy stuffed dog. "Don't hitchhike," the Mission Hills father said . The girl said after she was found abandoned in Mari na Del Rey last Friday that a man had gi\'Cn her $2 to help distribute advertising leaflets. 111eanwhile, the co u n t y Church Says Boy's Death 'Extreme' BARSTOW (UPI ) -The death of 11-year-old \Vesley Parker last week. after his parents threw away t h e diabetic youth "s insulin supply, was deplored J'.uesday by a SpGkesman for Ule Assemblies of GOO Churches in Soutllem California. The Rev. W i 11 i a m H. Robertson . dis tri ct superin- tend ent of the sect. said while his church "believes in divine healing," it does not "endorse or condone the throwing away or life-saving m e d i cation merely because the individual is presumed healed.,,- Robertson said, "We do not identify with those \\'ho lake extreme positions of failing to follow a common sense way of life and would not feel that an extreme position in Qlis re- gard brings any particular glory to GOO, nor does It re- flect to the credit of the church." , I . I I I I I .. ; Laoor Day Weekend Saturday and Sunday 9 a.m.•IOp~m., Monday 9a.m.·1:30 µm. Featuring eontinuous eountry Western Entertainment ~y: THE L1\RRY .B00TH BAND ffOP RATED ARTISTS FOR CAPl'!OL RF.c:ORDS) and ·.:::c --:::·:·:::;:;::.-. .r.'\' ' cUN \.tnrl!l'\to • ...,.., ;--....: ••••• &. • ~1...1 r t:lNv t.; F . \ ·(: 1.\-;JJ.i;~\.: ~f)ev ('lnTI!NOINC11EASEfNADM1SSION) ~fly\ .. . '' '" ·1ri-\,.") ' ~~ /11'' Free old foshioned hayrides every day for kids 4·12. Fleel-footed frolickin' and foncy sleppin' (A square dance jamboree) Eye-poppin' fireworks S.lurdoy 'n Sunday nights. INeREDIBLE USl\li'IN'eRITil!RS (NEWsHAMUFORMAYOR·SHOWl I PLUS ~ OOl\TH DEl'YING OOJBLB KITE 1'1.YlTI'800 FEET (A!RDEVU. DM RUS!NO & TI!E SKYFOXl SIDE·SPUTIIN'l\NTleS l\ND el\RRYIN' ElN (TI!E AQUAMAN!ACS -WITH TI!E NATIOl\"S HIGHEST HIGH D!\IE-84 FEE'll 1\LL FE)R 0NB L0W PRieE 1\T SEA WORLD. MISSleN Bm'· SAN 016G0 ) MElST IN<:?REDIBLE FElrr EVER PERl'ElRMED BY Ml\N i\ND l\NIMl\L ffHE SHAM1J RIDE llJMP) . .. ,. I I I ' ' 'I . ' ' ' ' DAD,y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE I Questions Answered ' A key question involving the SepL ll park and open space bond election in Cos.ta M~sa regards purchase or surplus sc hool property from the Newport-Mesa Unified School District. Most of the 45 acres was purchased originally by the Costa Mesa Union (elementary) School Distri ct, which later was absorbed into the new unified, two·city district. Some argue that Costa Mesa ns paid for the land origi- nally -and no\v are being asked to pay for it again. In other words, the question goes, why should tax· payers be asked to 1>ay twice for the same land? It's a question that deserves answering. The most important reason why the school district cannot give the land to Costa Mesa is a simple one. It is illegal. By state law, the property cannot be declared a girt. So the district pro bably will unload the five pieces ot property to private parties ultimately and use the in- come as trustees see fit. No matter th e source of the proceeds, the 1noney must be used for purchasing other land or for ca pital improvements -after part of it, about $500.000 worth , is paid back to the state for loans n1ade to the old e!e· mentary district. The remainder of the proceeds, about $1 million, would be used to improve and enlarge Costa Mesa High School. This means that, in a rou ndabout way, the money does stay in Costa Mesa after all. The district has a $2 ~2 million improvement commitment on the Mesa campus, but does not have funds to complete the progra1n. It also has been argued that the school district should allow park use of the property at a minimal rental fee to the city. On the surface, that sounds fair, but it leaves out the fact that ultimate use of surplus property must be approved by the state since state funds were involved in the original purchase of much of it. It also ignores the fact that district trustees are sworn to represent Newport taxpayers as well as Mesan s, and cannot legally benefit one community at the expense of the other. Former City Councilman William L. St. Clair, along Electronic 'Bugs' ' Could Backfire To the Editor : Newport Beach Police Chief James Glavas ha.s pro?)Sed a citywi de burglary alann network via cable television which would link every home and business in this city directly to police headquart ers. The chief pointed out. that a varielv of sensors could be installed by priVa te firms to signal illegal entry, fire, etc. He specifically statefi that the police would Wpeet such installations. I feel it is im· peratlve to point out to the citizens of Newport Beach (in these times of \Yatergale) that there exists the potential for electronic eavesdropping at any time of the day or·nishl directly by the police department. A LARGE variety or ''bug ging devices" could be affixed to such a system surreptitiously and· allow direet monitoring at police headquarters of any an<! all conversations in every single home and .business in this entire city. I do "not suggest that the chief or anyone in OUr city government is remote· ly considering such application of this c;.ble television alarm network ; ho\vever, the potential exists. Times change, police cb:efs ·come and go, and political v.ind s shift. Mass bugging of residences could be implemented at any time by political fiat. IN ADDITTON, I would like to call your attenlion tO the events of southeast Asia in 1967 when then Secretary of Defense Robett Strange McNamara announced the construction of a sophisticated elec· tronic aurveillanee-lnterdiction I i n e across' C.b ·e, · 17th parallel. T h e puf1>08e of tJ'js highly sophi sticated electroniC Interdiction system (C<Xle name : PrOject Mussel Shoals> \Vas to stop or;at -Jeasf, markedly impede the flow of men and material from North to South Vietnam. Portions of this electronic surveillance system bear similarities to I he proposed burglar alarm system pr~ posed by Chief Glavas. Among the com- ponents of this electronic line were seismic sensors "'hich triggered land mines in response to the vibration of human footsteps. trucks, and vehicles but v;ere capable of electronically rejecting the seismic vibration of the ubiquitous water buffalo. This system \\'as installed across the 17th ~rallel ;.,. an estimated cost of \vell in excess of two billion dollars. In short order, the very unsophistica ted North Vietnamese found thal they. coufd very re:ldlly ride "'·ater buffalo across the line. r would merely point out that no matter how sophisticated the sensor system of a burglar alann net\vork is, profesfilonal criminals (even simple rice farmers on occasion) can find ways to avoid it. DONALD R. STEELE. M.D. .Rememl>!!r? To the Editor: As a person who "'Orks wilh hundreds of very young children a year I am deep- ly concerned abou.t all phases of their lives. J was thlnklng about the future they will have If they continue to live in Costa Mesa.. They will not be able lo make any decisions about the use of the land, because. If we aren't very careful there won't be any l'acru1t land left . It se«ns 10 me that one generation should nol have the right to use up an the land and force future gMcraUons to live by ti-" standard.! or plans of this generation. WHEN WE moved lo Costa..lllesa in 11159 we could tJlke a drive Into the coun- try. put !arms and orange groves, u1 clean air, a.JI within ten minutes or our !cu Verde home. We WI no longer do this with our (iunity, can you f Do we, llie prosent generaUon hav• the MAILBOX Letters from readers are wetconie. Normally writers should convey their n~essages i,ii 300 words or U!ss. The right to condense letters to jlt space or elimina,te libel is reserved. All l.etters must include signature and rna ili1ig address, bua-nam~s ma~ be withheld on request if sufficitrit reason ls apparent. Poe try will 1iot be published. right to use up every acre and not leave some for future homemakers? Our children have rights too. rF WE develop the land available through the bond issue into parks we can all ·spend many hours enjoying the open space and at the same time leave this land free from the developers for our children's later enjoyment or use. Our children have rights too ... Vote YES for the OPEN SPACE. MRS. R. HERTZOG Preschools director l\'eed.• 'L«11d' Slide To the Editor: If there has ever been an issue needing the suppcrt of the voters in our city it is the bond issue on open space! WHAT bothers me is that I'm afraid the alternative is not really apparent to so many of our voters. Having asked in my own area, I find that horrible word "apathy" all too often. I. tor one, dread having high rise buildings, service stations or more motels on these spaces. How would you like living next to or in sight of one o( lhese horrors? PLEASE, fellow voters, support this issue with a "land" slide percentage! BEVERLY CAREY Unstable /tlan To the Editor: Poor Ronald Ziegler. Now, he has the hazard of bodily hann added to the other humiliating burdens .... ol serving as devoted slave and court fool to a presi- dent who appe ars to be confusing him self 1Nith one of tbe testier early English kitngs. ASIDE FROJ\1 \Vhat happens to Mr. Ziegler and his pride -or lack of it - this country just cannot afford to keep such an unstable man as Richard Nixon in office. and the sooner we recognize ll !he better. Since he will never Jet go hi s cro,vn and sceptre voluntarily, the only answer is to grasp the nettle and im· peach him. MARGARET NOLEN ~--By George ---. Dear George: \\'hen you were young did you think you had to always make IH•sses at girls to be "with it" and popula r? CLARA Dear Clara: Actually, I never cared much about ~.ing popular. I Juist did all that .because I like girls (Ho\V did you find out, anyhow?) 1Write to George ror relief from nervou5 tensfon. ~arn lhe secret lf Sideways Thinking. Then you'll have calm tonslon . ( • with a hand!UI or others, has been throwing around sta- tistics and claimS that would lead one to conclude the parks and open space program is foolish and that Mesa taxpayers are being taken. The facts do not support this. 'rhe sc hool district is going to sell the land. Much or it is ideal for parks and recreational use. The city needs land !or parks and recreational use. If the city does not buy it ·now, it will be developed in other ways, commer- cial or high density residential in all likelihood. Timing and price are right. The total bond program -including all improvements on all sites -will cost the Mesa homeowner only about $8 to $10 a year. It is a sound investment in a better community and better property values for all. Real Food Bargain '''ith food prices going up all around, it's nice to know of at least one place whe re they are remaining basically the same. . That place is the Ne,vport·Mesa Unified School Dis· t.r1ct. A full meal for an ele1ncntary school student cost 40 cents las t year and lt will cost 40 cents again this year. F~d Services· Director, Eve Cremers, says she will k~ep prices the same by more careful shopping, prepar- ation of more meals fron1 scratch, and by learning to make such non-meat iten1 s as cheese and poultry more attractive to students. . 1ifrs. Cremers says she is dead set on keeping the price of lunch the same because she is afraid that some of the district's poorer students may be forced to quit eating lunch altogether if prices go up. . .. • • -' \Ve can o~ly applaud her intentions and wi sh her t.h~ be st of luck i!l view of the rises in wholesale food prices that are still expected. At a time when food is being restricted, it is more important than ever that all of our .. children are given the opportunity for at least one soltd, balanced meal a da y. c 'You.'men behind me keep an eye out for bushwhackers/' -"-' Dea1· GI001nv Gus \Viii somebody please print a hard· ~get-off but easy-to-apply bumper sticker that says "PARKING SLOB" so I can quickly affix it to cars that clog drive\vays to law1- dromats, markets and the li ke where the rest of us citizens use the proper parking slots? 1·11 b11y a dozen! J.M. Gloomy Gu1 comments ire 1ubmltted by r11d.n Ind do not 1teett1•rity r111ec1 !he \llfWl ol Ille neWIP•per. S•nd Yl>Ur HI PffW• to Gloomy Gus, DIH~ Pilot. Good News For Ailing Globet .. otters ' SYDNEY J. HARRIS The happiest news for v.·orld travelers since the invention of Dramamine was reported reeently by the World Medical Association, which is distributing a pocket-size guide to English·speaki11g doctors in more than 70 countries around the V.'orld. This Inte rn ational Medical Directory will be more help to Americans lhan to anybody else. since we are notoriously lhe worst linguisls since the Tasn1a11ia•1s faded from sight. An American abroad can scar cely ask a \\•ai rer for a glass of y,:ater, much less describe an abdominal pain or an allergy to penicillin to a foreign doctor. The problem is made do~ibly acute bv lhe melancholy fact tha t fore;gn .:~ctorS, in my biased opinion. are generally in- ferior to the American b r eed . Diagnostically and technically speaking, we turn out the most proficient medical men (if not women) in the \vorld. NOT ONLY DO our standards setm lo be higher, but we are relatively free from the medical paranoia that is rampant in ::;o many other countries. The French, for instance, are, still obsessed lvith "li ver'": almost any complaint you have that can't be easily diagnosed is relegated to the liver in France. When t suffered a nasty case o( sunstroke at Cannes some years ago, two doctors solemnly assured me it \\'tis a liver malaise. "No, no." I insisted, 4'C'est le coup de soleil.'' They both laughed nastil y; everyone knows that niad d o g s , Englishmen. and 1\merica n tourist.s always go out in the mid-day hea t and (Ire impervious to sun~troke. lt was 24 hours before I could get them to stop treating me for 1noJndJI! de fuie. Without rrty rudimenta ry French , it might ha ve been a week . EVERY COUNTRY seems to have its fa vorite ailment, as a sort o( grab bag into which its doctors throw any mysterious . obscure, or unusual syn- drom es. The art of the differential di:ignosls has been brought to such a high level in the U.S. that we have become spoiled and Corget how ca~~illy hit-or· n1iss a doctor can diagnose us in A-Uidagasca r or tliorocco. There is really nothing worse than a medicaJ emergency when you are In a foreign country ; your xenophilia quickly flies out the window, and all your old chauvinistic feelings come back thmugh the door. Surrounded by seven of Europe's most noted specialists, you still wish that Marcus Welby would stride Into the room and stralghten them all out. I " Boats, Pfataes Aid S11augglers "• New Drug Traffic Tricks .. " WASHINGTON -The government's \\'ar against drug smuggling, trumpeted as one of the major domestic successes of the Nixon Administration. is losing the battle to fleets of smaU private planes and fast boats. Classified documents from t h e Customs Bureau made available to us demonstrate the ex- tent of the govern- ment's failure . They flatly state that the narcotics agents can· not compete with the ingenuity or the smugglers. The dope lUDllftS , ' have organir.ed lhe mo s t important , small boat operation since the evacuation of Dunkirk and the government's frag- mented narcotics forces are unable to cope \vilh them . "WE htUST undertake a program to provide Customs control of small boat traffic entering the United States." one of the documents asserts .. "Smuggling of narcot ic drugs by small boats is a serious problem. At present. we have no means of effecting interdlction of drugs entering the t:nited States by this means.'' The high flying dope peddlers operate with equal freedom, hauling their cargo of white powder from Mexico and Canada with virtuaHy no opposition. "Smuggling by means of private aircraft has grown in a situation where control of this commerce, for technical reasons, was i:iot possible," t be documents said. In short, the sit uation is so out of hand thal Mafia and free-lanee traffickers have virtual carte bla.rn::he to haul their \ra res across the United States borders. FEDERAL antinarcotics officials have made elaborate plans to increase their efficiency in the air and on the water , but budget coo.scious bureaucrats have cut out this capability. For this fi!IC8l year alone. the Office of Management and Budget bas sliced the Customs budgel for these plans from '11.4 million to $3.3 million. This. penny-wise policy is preventing narcotics agents from acquiring sophis· tica ted tools, including aircraft with special tracking equipment, boats fast enough to catch smugglers' craft and sensors to seek out the dope nmners. The drug fighters are using some elec· Ironic sensors borrowed from the military, but find them virtually worth· less. "To date, sensors available for boat surveill~ have been rudimentary in nature," one CU$toms report states. "This situation exists because or the lack of developmentaf Jtmding and lechnical .capabiUtj that has existed for years within the CU!toms Agency Service." THE l!EA Vu. Y publicized seizures of millions of dollars worth of i.arcotlcs are largely the work of old.fashioned customs ... and narcotics agents at ports or . t· elsewhere, based on leads from painstak-_-: ingly nurtured informants. Arrests or smugglers through random checks of small planes or boats have been few and infrequent. Presently, the air-sea figh t against' drugs is badly fragmented between Customs at the Treasury Department1 and the new Drug Enforcemen t Administration (DEA) at the Justice Department. A memorandum describing a meeting last month bet,Yeen OJstoms•t air intrusion coordinators and George Brosan, a top Customs enforcement of· ficial . makes clear that neither agency knows wbat ~ other is doing. THERE ARE about 50 planes Of"'• variou s kinds available at any one time'-· to the two agencies for air and boat ~ surveillance. But without cooperation·1-:. betWttn them through use of informers who signal the departure o! a shipment • from some :onely harbor or airport, the1 ; planes are useless. They cannot "picket-11 ' line" the entire border. 1 DEA. which may wind up with the ; whole program eventually, is too busy reorganizing to take on any new duties. ' particularly ones as complicated as the. "Air Intrusion" operation. '.' The overall mess is best summed up by,: Drosan: " "Both the Drug Enforcement . Administration and 'the lmmigrallon and•• Naturalization Service have token pre> grams. Neither can compare with the , present Customs effort, and possibly"; some thought ought to be given to com.'· bining the three programs." • 1 ·' Safety, But Not Tyranny ' ' :'"t Every law-abiding citizen has a right to feel safe in his home, and his person - "'helher on the street. in the park or in his car. And, he has a right to expect that his government provide that safet y. But last year there were more than 800,000 felony cr!J,nes in California. The crime rate has in- creased nearly 200 percent in the past to years. Crime is the number one pub- lic concern. Because of that in September, I 9 7 2. Gov. Reagan nam ed ! five-member Select Committee on La"· Enforcement Problems and charged it to deve lop recommendations on how best to fight crime. After 10 month s of digging into the pro~ tem, the task force has issued its 164· page report. It contains a wide rangt of significant and far-reaching recom- mendations: -CREATION of a Public Safety Agen- cy to consolidate state Jaw enforcement !unctions (highway petrol, prisons~ emergency services, etc.); -Establish the state pollcy that Criminals who use firearms during a crime must go to prison, without chance ol probation ; -Prison should be the general rule, ralhcr 1.han the ex ception, for convicted narcotics pedd lers. Conviction f o r possession or sale of heroin should bring mandatory imprisonment with IJJJle hope of probation: -Ii should be a misdemeanor, without exccptlon, (or a person to drive a vehicle when his blood alcollol content ls 0.10 percent or higher, and --911 should be the ornclal stJltewldc ( RUS WALTON J and local Emergency Telephone Number in case of crime, fire or accident. POINTING to the need for criminal justice that is swift, certain and strong - but that it is now slow, uncertain and in- effect ual -the Task Force urged refonns to insure speedy trials : ·-Reclassify minor 1raffic violations and shift them from the courts to in· formal summary procedures ; -Give priority to cases involving opiates and dangerous drugs; -Permit six-member juries for misde- mean ors and felonies not punishable by life imprisonment or d~tb and -Authorize verdicts by a flve·sixth jury majority, except for capital punish· ment, and -Dispose of cases In favor of the defendant Unless the matter goes to trial within 60 days. In the area or prison terms and cor· rectlooal institutions, the Task Force urged that the state's 111-concetved p~ batlon subsidy program be cant<lfied. The commlJJee alao Ullled that work be made mandatory for an prison lnrhatet except where security requlrtments make It impossible. • ' THE MOST controverlsal recom- mendation calls for the abolition of the so-called exclusionar)r rule. That rule holds that evidence obtali!ed tlil'oUgh U- legal search and seizure la lnadmis&ible In court. True, the rule ol eiclusion I• oR•n Uled to thwart justice. But, the problem re!ts I • no t so much with the rule as with those } judges who twist it to coddle the I criminal. ..., The solution is not to remove that im portant cltllen potection; the solution is to establish firm parameters within which the . rule of exclusion can be air 1 plied. It is indeed, the lirst and !9remost duly of government to-protect us from those who would prey upon us. That's what • government is all abOut. But, we must 1 take care lest the crimes of the felon are replaced by the tyranny of government. Such a trade is not necessary. And. in the pursuit of justice, it wwtd be of dubious merit. DAILY PILOT Robm N. W•ed, ful>ll.!htr Tho'"°' Ktevll, Editor Barbczra K1'tibich 1 .Editorial Pag• Editor I The fdttortal ;PIE" Qf ttM Dally Pilot .-.eeq to lnfonn a1id •t!mWate' · I readers . by ~tlrc on th11 Pllt / dlvtl'lticommentary' on IOpfcs Ol 11>- tft'elt by ~cated eolumnilta and cartoonJJ:ts, by providina a fenam ~ ! rtadm' views and by pttttnlJns ttdl 1 newspaper'• opinioM and td8t. on I CWTtn~ topics. The tdttorJ&l QPioia of the Daily Plk>t appear only In ~he editorial coluntn.,at ttie.11Dp ol the 'Plat. Oplnion.f expreaed by the coJ. um.fllsia and cartOorust. and letter wrtt,... are 1btb' ow,. and no ~ mcnt of Mr "'"ili )1 the Da.ibt P1JOt lh•llcl't• -...i. Wednesd•Y· ~~ 29, 1973 ' I j